TY - CHAP
T1 - Resourceful Urbanism
T2 - Designing Regenerative Cities through Adaptive Reuse and Circular Innovation
AU - Cheshmehzangi, Ali
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Resourceful Urbanism reimagines how cities can thrive through constraints, whether environmental, economic, or spatial, by harnessing ingenuity, local knowledge, and innovative design. This book focuses on how adaptive reuse, circular thinking, and participatory governance might lead to urban resilience rather than high-tech fixes or significant advancements. It makes the case that being "resourceful" in the urban context means changing our values for things like relationships, materials, ecosystems, and lived experience in addition to getting more done with less. The transformative tactics that influence the urban futures of both Global North and Global South contexts are examined in this book in a current and fact-based manner. It combines several approaches, i.e., formal and informal, grassroots and institutional, to show how locally rooted activities may make cities more regenerative, inclusive, and adaptable. The book is structured around four central themes that collectively define resourceful urbanism: “Community-Led Innovation”, “Adaptive Reuse and Retrofitting”, “Circular Resource Management”, and “Multifunctional Urban Spaces”. Each theme is illustrated through two in-depth case studies, one from a developed context and one from a developing context, showing how contextually tailored interventions can drive systemic transformation.
AB - Resourceful Urbanism reimagines how cities can thrive through constraints, whether environmental, economic, or spatial, by harnessing ingenuity, local knowledge, and innovative design. This book focuses on how adaptive reuse, circular thinking, and participatory governance might lead to urban resilience rather than high-tech fixes or significant advancements. It makes the case that being "resourceful" in the urban context means changing our values for things like relationships, materials, ecosystems, and lived experience in addition to getting more done with less. The transformative tactics that influence the urban futures of both Global North and Global South contexts are examined in this book in a current and fact-based manner. It combines several approaches, i.e., formal and informal, grassroots and institutional, to show how locally rooted activities may make cities more regenerative, inclusive, and adaptable. The book is structured around four central themes that collectively define resourceful urbanism: “Community-Led Innovation”, “Adaptive Reuse and Retrofitting”, “Circular Resource Management”, and “Multifunctional Urban Spaces”. Each theme is illustrated through two in-depth case studies, one from a developed context and one from a developing context, showing how contextually tailored interventions can drive systemic transformation.
KW - Adaptive Reuse
KW - Circular Innovation
KW - Climate Adaptation
KW - Community-Led Development
KW - Informal Urbanism
KW - Public Space
KW - Regenerative Cities
KW - Resourceful Urbanism
KW - Sustainable Urban Design
KW - Sustainable Urbanism
KW - Urban Resilience
KW - Urban Sustainability
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105021544948
U2 - 10.1007/978-981-95-4138-6
DO - 10.1007/978-981-95-4138-6
M3 - Book Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:105021544948
T3 - Urban Sustainability
SP - 1
EP - 155
BT - Urban Sustainability
PB - Springer
ER -