Taking Implementation Seriously in the Evaluation of Urban Growth Management Strategies: “Safeguarding the Future” of the Antwerp City-Region
Abstract
:1. Introduction: Evaluating Growth Management
“A multifaceted policy can reinforce a development tendency toward more compact communities, support efficient infrastructure investments, preserve open space, and encourage the revitalization of many declining areas”.[5]
“The construction and implementation of UGBs in other urban areas is a protracted political process. Turf battles often arose between city and county governments and, in the larger metropolitan areas, between city governments”.[6]
“Efforts to manage urban growth tend to occur within the frameworks, conventions, and requirements of government structures—from the municipal to the national. However, this very much depends upon associated political and cultural systems”.[26]
2. Analysing the Institutional and Discursive Dimensions of UGM
- The first dimension of actors and coalitions include governments, departments, private citizens, firms, and NGOs with a stake in the policy process.
- The second dimension is rules of the game, defined as mutually agreed formal procedures and informal routines of interaction within institutions. These rules select the shape in which social interactions take place. For instance, procedures to involve citizens in the planning process lead to a certain kind of participation which may or may not have the intended effect and may or may not be satisfactory for those participating.
- Thirdly, resources and power can mean material resources such as land and finances, but also knowledge and expertise. Funding agencies, incumbents of political office, and experts all possess particular resources in spatial planning which lead to the possession of various types of power and influence to affect the outcome of a policy process.
- Fourth, policy arrangements are analysed in terms of discourses. This is a substantive dimension, as opposed to the former three, which are organisational dimensions of a policy arrangement. Discourses include the views and narratives of the actors involved in a policy process. Discourses contain and reflect norms and values, problem definitions, and preferred solutions to problems. The PAA draws a distinction between macro-level governance discourses and those at the level of the concrete policy issues at hand. These discourses may overlap or be at odds. For instance, in spatial planning, the strategic aims of a plan at the regional level plan can be opposed to the interpretations of citizens whose property is affected by it.
3. Case Study: Demarcating Urban Areas in Flanders
3.1. The Belgian and Flemish Spatial Planning System
3.2. Restraining Sprawl in Flanders
3.3. Demarcating the Antwerp Metropolitan Area
3.4. Data
4. Analysis: Safeguarding the Future
“Today we have arrived at a balanced proposal in which we safeguard the future of the Antwerp region and make the Antwerp metropolitan area even more attractive for working, residing and living”.
4.1. Phase 1: Counteracting Fragmentation (1996–1997)
“(…) directed interweaving and bundling of functions and facilities, among which the economic functions, within the urban areas, above all absolute priority is to use and manage the existing urban structure as well as possible (…) the preservation and where possible strengthening and expansion of open space. (…) This breaking of the trend aims for the protection of open space, counteracting the fragmentation, and the separation of open space and urban areas”.[55]
“Deconcentrated clustering goes against unbridled suburbanisation and fragmentation and thus reduces the pressure on the countryside”.[39]
“The demarcation of the urban areas is considered an essential policy measure in order to stop the urban flight and ribbon development, to be able to realise a “supply policy” regarding additional housing and space for economic activities and safeguard the rural areas from urban development”.([39], p. 212)
“We were not always very happy with that. Because what we wanted to do was partly at odds with the traditional zoning plans. Those are aimed primarily at legal certainty (…) while we would have preferred to depart from a vision and then see which technical, juridical conditions were necessary to transform those interventions in reality”.(E2)
“The spatial concepts for an urban area have to be aimed at possibilities for expansion. Especially the targets regarding housing and commercial areas have to be translated to the terrain”.[55]
4.2. Phase 2: Increasing Tension (2003–2005)
“The pressure on the countryside can only be controlled by catering to the spatial needs for housing and commercial activities in the urban area”([56], p. 13)
“Yes, very limited you know? The main task is handling permits, planning is a task at the side. So, I didn’t really treat it very substantially”.(A-S2)
“Although the planning firm started from the ambition of the RSV, from a demarcation line to a programme for the Antwerp region, they were not allowed to work like that, they had to return to the old way of rezoning and -colouring. In effect this is almost a zoning plan”.(A-P5)
4.3. Phase 3: Economic Engine for Flanders (2007–2009)
“How can I as a city gain power over the adjacent municipalities, and how can I as fringe municipality keep the power of the city out? That’s what it came down to. And absolutely nothing more, no cooperation”.(E1)
“Because of the plans, some farms will be doomed to disappear since the area will have become unliveable”.(Gazet van Antwerpen, 21 November 2008)
4.4. Phase 4: “Coordinating Objections” (2008–2009)
“The objections had to be coordinated and then we expect from Vlacoro a technical recommendation. (…) Yes, it was a technical committee. So, in principle you have to depart from the RSV that was approved by parliament. Vlacoro did not judge that. It’s more about: How shall we propose to solve these technical objections?”.(E4-1)
“The regulations for the natural area are unclear, can I build a stable for animals, does the area need to be fenced in, can the terrains be grazed, …”.([51], p. 14)
“The 33 ha of the industrial zone is too little considering the high target number. One wonders whether the site doesn’t have the potential to incorporate more”.([51], p. 33)
“Why is the Fort of Kruibeke included in the demarcation and not that of Zwijndrecht? The fort of Kruibeke also needs to be excluded from the demarcation”.([51], p. 33)
“The plan is strongly based on the obligation to realize the quantitative targets, which means that there is sometimes less attention left for the spatial quality of some proposed urban developments”.([51], p. 102)
There is no capacity. It’s almost impossible as a citizen nowadays to object properly against a complex plan. And then you have to know the procedures too. Planning law is tremendously complex. You can’t know that as a citizen, you have to hire a very expensive specialised lawyer. There is no money for that. Who is going to gather that? Who will pay for that? And you have to do all of that within a month. That’s practically impossible!(A-A1)
And apart from the number of objections you filed, or the number of signatures you collected, that is of no import. The law is the only thing of import. [Politicians say] we belong in the urban area so we can’t say no [to development]. –Yes, but what about our arguments? In what way do you represent our interest? The interest of the common citizen, of the current residents? And there is absolutely no answer to that.(A-A2)
And what it became in the end is at its Belgian, right? Something very administrative, something legal-technical, zoning, securing, putting it into concrete. Was that the intent? I don’t think so, but oh well. That’s the only thing people know in Flanders right: securing, juridical (knocks on table). Which rights do I have, up to which plot? And that entire structure planning philosophy is translated in demarcations at the plot level, property titles yet again. What is allowed, what isn’t? That uncertainty of “in time, what could this become??” A Fleming doesn’t want that (laughs).(E3)
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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1. | In Dutch: ruimtelijke uitvoeringsplanning or RUPs. |
2. | The COMPASS typology merges insights about the three independent planning systems in Belgium into one national type. |
3. | This text adheres to the original Dutch acronyms of the planning documents to cater to those familiar with planning in Flanders. |
4. | |
5. | In addition, there was a set of policy measures aimed at urban revitalization and making cities more attractive places to live; however, as this falls under the policy domain of Domestic Affairs rather than spatial planning, these are left outside the purview of this analysis. |
6. | The prescribed minimum density in the rural areas outside the urban growth boundary was 15 units per hectare. |
7. | While the demarcations of urban areas in Flanders have some characteristics of smart-growth strategies, they completely lack the involvement of market actors as well as redistribution of development opportunities via transferable development rights (TDR). Furthermore, despite initial intentions, municipalities and provinces were not treated as equal partners in the process. The demarcations are, therefore, discussed here as a classic growth management strategy that in Bae’s [2] typology can be characterised as an example of an urban growth boundary with accompanying minimum density zoning, infill and residential unit ordinances and a limitation on new residential development outside the growth boundary. |
8. | The demarcation process of the Flemish urban area surrounding Brussels is arguably even more complex and hence rich in empirical terms. However, as Brussels is a separate region within Belgium, its demarcation is strongly characterised by communitarian politics [47] and is, therefore, not typical of the demarcation processes in Flanders in general. |
9. | Politicians in Flanders are allowed to have concurrent seats in both local and regional bodies, creating close ties between local and regional politics. Therefore, the process was halted between 2005 and 2007 pending the outcome of local elections taking place 8 October 2006. |
10. | There were more interviews conducted with local planners, politicians and citizens since the demarcation of the urban area surrounding the city of Mechelen was also researched. As this paper only reports on the Antwerp case, these are not included here. |
11. | All quotes from interviewees, press and policy documents are translated from Dutch by the authors. |
12. | In Flanders, these firms perform a mix of architectural, urban planning and research work with some of their staff moving freely in both academic and practitioners’ circles. In fact, one of the firm’s directors played an important role in developing the RSV itself. Furthermore, building private sector capacity through developing expertise regarding the new structure planning framework was a deliberate strategy of those designing the RSV to improve the quality of its implementation [1]. |
13. | This sounds more subtle in Dutch: een verruiming van “Antwerpen” naar “het Antwerpse” (p. 37). A formulation with sufficient vagueness not to be politically threatening. |
14. | A point interesting in its own right. The adoption of planning categorizations by other policy sectors could be regarded as a desirable intent of a strategic spatial planning instrument. In the Flemish case, however, this led to struggle and dissatisfaction which expressed itself in a lack of cooperation at the local level that then extended to the Flemish regional level. |
15. | These numbers include “internal references”: responses to objections that refer to previous responses in the report. |
16. |
Period | Event |
---|---|
April 2003 | Start of demarcation process, round of exploratory talks with municipalities conducted by planning firm led by a former provincial official. |
June 2004–April 2005 | Three “steering group” meetings of Flemish officials, provinces and municipalities, leading to various iterations of a metropolitan vision. |
15 April 2005 | Final report concluding the vision process. Contains proposal of demarcation and areas to be rezoned. End of assignment for planning firm. |
20079 | Process restarted by administration. August 23rd plenary meeting on the design of the regional spatial plan (GRUP). |
April–June 2008 | Environmental and safety assessments completed. |
1 July 2008 | Minister of Spatial Planning presents the spatial demarcation to mayors of municipalities involved in plenary meeting. |
5 September 2008 | Preliminary approval of the Flemish Government of the demarcation Antwerp Metropolitan Area, press release. |
October–December 2008 | Public inquiry. Objections considered by the Flemish Committee of Spatial Planning (Vlacoro). |
8 April 2009 | Report of the Flemish Committee of Spatial Planning. |
19 Jun 2009 | Definitive approval of regional spatial development plan of the demarcation Antwerp metropolitan area. |
2009–2012 | Council of State hears several procedures against the demarcation GRUP. |
Phase PAA Dimension | 1. Counteracting Fragmentation 1996–1997 | 2. Increasing Tension 2003–2005 | 3. Economic Engine for Flanders 2007–2008 | 4. “Coordinating Objections” 2008–2009 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Actors and Coalitions | Designers Spatial Structure Plan for Flanders Private urban planning firm designing demarcation methodology. | Private urban planning firm (attempts to maintain original vision). City of Antwerp (disinterested). Fringe municipalities and Flemish Region (oppositional). “Lack of a figurehead”. | Spatial Planning administration turns proposal into preliminary plan. Minister of Spatial Planning and his cabinet influence content of the preliminary plan. Fringe municipalities (opposition and political struggles). | Flemish Committee of Spatial Planning adjudicates objections. Citizens, organisations and municipalities (object in public inquiry). Flemish Government decides on final spatial plan, not bound to follow advice. |
Rules of the Game | New structure planning framework with the ambition to move beyond legalistic land use planning tradition. | Strategic structure planning approach shackled by land use planning status quo. Fear of a demarcated “urban area” as prelude to municipal mergers. “Procedural process”. | Goal: meeting quantified targets laid out in earlier plans. Rising stakes: demarcation starts to function as guideline for distribution of resources in other public sectors, leading to power plays. | Rules of the public inquiry procedure of central importance. Previous plans, regulations, legislation both objected to and used as basis for recommendations. |
Resources and Power | Offer sectoral targets for growth to ensure political support for RSV. | Little fringe capacity to handle demarcation process, sufficient capacity in the city. Links between local and regional politics influencing the plan. Resources for consultation process withheld. | Designating land for development to ensure stakeholder support. Metropolitan functions. Administration and Minister possess power of summary viz. earlier steps in the process. | Objections over zoning decisions. Lack of legal, financial and temporal resources to file objections for most citizens. |
Discourses | Deconcentrated clustering to safeguard rural areas from urban development. | Antwerp region as a checkerboard of fragmentation, reduce pressure on the countryside. Ambition for city–regional cooperation: “from Antwerp to the Antwerp region”. Negative connotation of “urban area”. | Space for expansion: Safeguarding the future by enabling development. The plan creates “new space” and the possibility to build new houses. Quantified targets versus threat to local liveability. | Making technical recommendations. Quantitative targets take precedence over spatial quality. “In what way are our [citizens] interests represented?” |
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de Olde, C.; Oosterlynck, S. Taking Implementation Seriously in the Evaluation of Urban Growth Management Strategies: “Safeguarding the Future” of the Antwerp City-Region. Land 2021, 10, 159. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020159
de Olde C, Oosterlynck S. Taking Implementation Seriously in the Evaluation of Urban Growth Management Strategies: “Safeguarding the Future” of the Antwerp City-Region. Land. 2021; 10(2):159. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020159
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Olde, Clemens, and Stijn Oosterlynck. 2021. "Taking Implementation Seriously in the Evaluation of Urban Growth Management Strategies: “Safeguarding the Future” of the Antwerp City-Region" Land 10, no. 2: 159. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020159
APA Stylede Olde, C., & Oosterlynck, S. (2021). Taking Implementation Seriously in the Evaluation of Urban Growth Management Strategies: “Safeguarding the Future” of the Antwerp City-Region. Land, 10(2), 159. https://doi.org/10.3390/land10020159