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20.06.: Urban Renewal in China: Practice, Policies, and Trajectory - A Talk by Prof. Han Sun Sheng (University of Melbourne)

Join us when Prof. Han Sun Sheng talks about "Urban Renewal in China: Practice, Policies, and Trajectory", either via Zoom or on location! More information below.

Date/Time: 17:00-18:30 CEST, June 20, Tuesday, 2023
Place: Fish Bowl, Habitat Unit
Room 624, Straße des 17. Juni 152,
Technical University of Berlin, 10623 Berlin

or


Zoom Link
tu-berlin.zoom.us/j/66023061197
Meeting-ID: 660 2306 1197
Kenncode: 124450

Abstract


Urban renewal is a process in which derelict buildings are transformed and poor
infrastructure is uplifted to an acceptable standard. Embedded deeply in everyday
life, especially in terms of economic performance and social justice, urban renewal is both a technical subject for urban planning and a multi-disciplinary subject for
examining social change. The purpose of this presentation is to provide a critical
review of China’s urban renewal practice, policies, and trajectory over the past 70
years. Benchmarked against a wide range of experiences in multiple countries, this presentation aims to answer three questions: what is unique in urban renewal in China? How have political upheavals and economic reforms shaped the process? And what are the key indicators for gauging its future trajectory? China’s urban renewal shares several characteristics commonly observed in other countries, such as those relating its purposes, difficulties, public sector role, and the shifting foci in the process. However, urban renewal in China is unique in its pace, approaches, how it is shaped by the political system and the property right regime, and the way that social justice is managed. Urban renewal is used as a policy instrument for the government to realise its ambition. As such, the practice was largely symbolic in the 1950s, followed by a minimal effort in the 1960s and the 1970s. Economic reform was a big pushing factor towards urban renewal, leading to sweeping changes to the built environment from 1980 onwards for almost three decades. Large-scale demolition modernised the image of cities and delivered much-needed housing to many, but the threat to urban character and social cohesion emerged as concerns.
More recent policies begin to include residents’ participation in the process, though the method and impact are questionable. China’s urban renewal trajectory has already projected an upward trend towards sustainability, as measured by evolving barometers monitoring the participation and recognition of and benefit distribution among the stakeholders.

Bio

Dr. Sun Sheng Han is Professor of Urban Planning in the Faculty of Architecture,
Building and Planning at the University of Melbourne. He researches into urban and regional changes in the Asia-Pacific region with a focus on economic, institutional, and spatial transformations. He has published widely in urban and regional studies.
His recent books include Towards Low Carbon Cities in China (Leading editor,
Routledge 2015), Population Mobility, Urban Planning and Management in China
(Co-editor, Springer 2015), Planning Quality Streets: Theory and Practice (Lead
author, China Architecture and Building Press 2020, in Chinese), and International
Perspectives on the Belt and Road Initiative (Co-editor, Routledge 2021).

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