20
final result, to behave in a logic of competition but
without neglecting the social dimension of urban
development. As concerns this last aspect, a balanced
social distribution of the positive effects of any
reurbanisation process and more community
participation are progressively recognised as desirable
and of absolute importance conditions supporting any
urban renewal policy.
Moreover, a microeconomic foundation of
residential mobility will be presented with a simple
model.
1.2 European urban dynamics: a general theory of
urban development
In Urban Europe: A Study of Growth and Decline
(Van den Berg et al.1982) it has been stated that urban
systems evolve according to a cyclical pattern. The
basic assumption underlying the theory of the dynamics
of urban regions is that urban systems rise and fall
according to the spatial behaviour of urban actors, who
are motivated by successive combinations of changing
exogenous variables, such as demographics, politics,
social values and technology.
Studying a sample of functional urban regions
(FURs) in the period 1950-1975, the authors identify
four stages of development.
21
The first one, called urbanisation, is a stage of
spatial concentration in which the growth of the core
dominates that of the ring, and the whole agglomeration
is impressively growing. The stage of urbanisation runs
parallel to the process of industrialisation that gave the
strongest impulse to urban growth, drawing masses of
migrants coming from rural areas in search of jobs to
the cities. High priority for economic growth, location
of large-scale industries and development of local
public transport are the main features of this stage.
Urban functions, such as residential, working, shopping
and transport, are all concentrated in the core. However
this concentration in the long term has a negative
impact on the location and welfare potential of the city
core that increasingly becomes less attractive for
residents as a place to live in and for companies as a
location for their businesses.
At the next stage, namely suburbanisation, or
urban sprawl, the main feature is that of spatial
deconcentration with the ring’s growth dominating that
of the core. This stage is basically a period in which
the suburban municipalities find their population
growing fast, while the core is losing inhabitants,
although a strong link between the formers and the
latter remains because job are still in the core. The
main characteristics of this stage are the rise in
prosperity due to economic growth, the increasing car-
22
ownership and the strong expansion of transport
infrastructure put into action by government policy.
At this stage huge commuter flows between
suburbs and the core – especially during peak hours -
occur as a result of such development, leading to a
situation in which the increasing unprofitability of
public transport represents a relevant urban problem,
very difficult to be solved. Moreover migrants continue
to be oriented to the core not only for work, but they
also rely on it for the higher-order services such as
hospitals, theatres, cinemas, etc. With the progressive
separation of residences and workplaces, the ensuing
unbalanced traffic flows, congestion in the inner cities,
increasing unprofitability of public transport and the
inclination of service companies to leave the congested
town centres, large towns enter in a less favourable
position with respect to the smaller ones, because the
latter are preferred location for residential and tertiary
activities. The consequence of such unpleasant
phenomena is that the large agglomerations tumble
from the suburbanisation stage experiencing a new
trend called disurbanisation.
At this third stage, the entire metropolitan area is
losing population and employment because of rapid
out-migration mostly to the smaller municipalities
located at some distance away. The main cause of the
occurring of this stage is that congestion makes all
23
kinds of workplace and central provisions in the city
less accessible and because of lack of space, higher
rents and living costs make the minor towns relatively
more attractive.
The agglomerations that disurbanised not only
lose their inhabitants and activities, but also face the
problems and consequences of rising unemployment,
deteriorating facilities and services, social disease and
exclusion and, particularly in the central cities, public
deficits created by their shrinking tax bases.
In other words the disurbanising large
agglomeration bears the effects of the increased
attractivity of medium-size agglomerations further
away. Therefore the competitive position of the
original agglomeration falls down in favour of the
smaller towns. One of the main reason of the ‘success’
of the smaller agglomerations is that there has been a
great increase in the appreciation for the quality of life,
i.e. for an attractive, safe and socially balanced living
and working climate. As a result of urban decay, urban
regions have been increasingly compelled to behave in
a logic of competition to avoid the reaching of a
situation of permanent decline. Nevertheless there exist
some variables - defined for instance in Urban Systems
in a Dynamic Society (Van den Berg, 1987) - that
reverse the process of urban decline boosting a renewal
growth, according to the cyclical pattern of urban
development.
24
This is the fourth and last stage distinguished in
the pattern of urban development and it is called
reurbanisation.
In this stage the revitalisation of cities strongly
depends on the ability of local government to develop
and implement a new policy able to attract back the
people who previously left for the suburbs or minor
towns. This has to be done not through the exploitation
of given locational advantages, such as capital and
natural endowment, but rather with an appropriate local
policy capable to improve the quality of life of their
cities and their accessibility and thus capable to raise
the urban competitiveness.
By adopting a policy of urban revitalisation, local
governments try to upgrade their city’s attraction for
the ‘market parties’, i.e. for inhabitants, business
companies, visitors and investors. To this extent, such
a policy must be developed in close cooperation with
those market parties and with an eye to their various
preferences
1
. It is important that cities do not just
follow the trend, but rather are able to anticipate it so
as to manage it in the most proper way.
1
For a thorough analysis of the subject see Van den Berg, Urban Systems in a Dynamic Society, Rotterdam, 1987
25
Fig 1.1 - Population size of the core, ring, and
functional urban region (FUR) in different
stages of urban development
Source: Urban Europe: A Study of Growth and Decline,
Van den Berg et al.,1982
Generally speaking reurbanisation occurs when
the shares of the population and employment in the
core with respect to those in the entire agglomeration
increase again. Nevertheless this must not lead to a
misunderstanding of the very characteristics of this
stage. The possible improved competitive position of
the core is not likely to lead to a population explosion,
because today’s high demands on housing and
environment preclude high population densities for the
obvious reason of the increased appreciation for the
quality of the living and working environment. Thus
26
large cities cannot become as large as they used to be
in the past, and therefore core population and
employment will only show modest quantitative
growth. What reurbanisation really means is primarily
the recovery of the large core, i.e. new flows of
financial means, new opportunities of employment and
the fact that people converge there again. Because the
growth of population and employment will be limited,
the reurbanisation of large towns does little to reverse
the trend of spatial deconcentration, which will
continue in the medium term anyway. Revitalisation
and deconcentration can go side by side, and are not
mutually exclusive. It is the rapid development of
higher-order service-sector activities and the
improvement of the quality of the living and working
environment and the consequent attraction and return of
higher-income groups that in turn boost further creation
or preservation of high-grade facilities, which will
make the core even more attractive to these groups.
The improvement of the quality of the city’s
environment has to be undertaken through the
rehabilitation of the existing house stock, improving
the traffic situation with a redesigned road system, off-
street parking facilities, creating pedestrian precincts
are zones and upgrading the social infrastructures.
The renovation of a city was formerly considered
by local governments just as a matter of improvement
27
of the local housing quality in such a way to stem the
massive outflows from cities. However, it soon become
clear that this type of renovation offered no relief for
the economic crises that many European cities have
been confronted with in the past several decades. It was
finally understood that restoring the urban economy
was at least as much important and urgent as improving
the housing situation in old town quarters.
The economic recovery of the city was claiming
for the availability of well-educated, high-skilled
personnel, as well as first-class locations, i.e. for those
who first left the city because the only group enjoying
the greatest freedom in choosing their residential
locations. Thus in the city centres, revitalisation has
accelerated the growth of employment for well-trained
individuals, far outpacing the job opportunities for the
unskilled and low-skilled. As a result of the latter,
those who concentrates in the inner cities, hardly profit
from the revitalisation measures.
So far in this chapter, revitalisation policy has
been dealt just as matter of improvement of the city’s
appeal as a location for businesses, well-educated and
high-skilled staff and, implicitly, as a magnet for real
estate investors and visitors. Of course a city that fails
to attract investors and developers will hardly reach the
renovation it needs.
28
As on the whole real investors are free to choose
an investment project as well as the country or region
to invest in, within the same country, a ‘rational’
choice will prefer high-return, low-risk projects given
by the investment climate of individual cities. This in
turn depends, among other factors, on the
diversification of the urban economy, the town’s
market potential and the quality of the living
environment
2
.
At the same time, cities that lack appeal to
visitors cannot profit from the strong expansion of the
tourist sector, which increasingly, and for a growing
number of cities, is becoming a pillar of the local
economy.
Finally, cities that are unpleasant places to live
lack a foundation for future economic growth.
However, as much as these types of policy may
have been too much oriented to the economy (of the
‘uppers’), neglecting their dangerous social
implications, in turn, they have lead to a progressive
erosion of the residential function, and the widening
gap between rich and poor. Extreme and unrestrained
wealth and bitter poverty and social exclusion are often
found side by side in such cities. As a final result,
serious social tensions have been unavoidable. Facing
such contradictory developments, a revitalisation
2
Klaassen, van den Berg, van der Meer, The City: Engine Behind Economic Recovery, Rotterdam, 1989
29
policy cannot meet but a loss of societal support and
finally be doomed to fail.
As far as a local government is really and
seriously concerned about the welfare of its own
citizens, it should prefer an urban policy pursuing the
achievement of economic revival in a socially equitable
manner, that is a policy designed in such a way to have
a balanced social distribution of the effects.
Indeed not only higher-income groups are
involved in the development of strategy of
revitalisation, but on the contrary each strategy is
useless without societal support. Local government
must negotiate with, and consider the needs of the
entire local population.
1.3 Which revitalisation without societal support?
As already put in evidence above, societal support
is of eminent imortance in every revitalisation process.
To this extent, however, it is necessary by local
government to gain trust by all the actors involved in
the urban renovation process by creating a structure for
the development of community participation
programmes applicable to the urban environment.
Community participation has here to be considered as a
process designed to create conditions of economic and
30
social progress for the whole community with its active
participation.
To fully understand community participation it is
necessary to understand its relationship with the wider
political, economic and social urban environment in a
structured way.
In fact to induce a particular development, a local
government may be tempted to comply in fully with the
wishes of one market party, that is not likely to be that
of the inhabitants; whether such a policy really furthers
municipal welfare, not only in the short run but in the
long run, is questionable.
At this point a problem arises. It concerns with
the possibility for a local government to enhance the
well being of its citizens without heeding the ambitions
of the market parties: since most of them will be little
inclined to cooperate with a local government, such a
policy certainly cannot contribute to a maximum
growth of municipal welfare.
The following question is therefore immediate:
how to establish trust ties among the citizens in order
to make the disposition to support the urban policy
sustainable? I cannot but remember what Arrow said in
a well-known essay appeared a few years ago talking
about economic development: ”one can plausibly
maintain that most of the world’s backwardness can be
31
explained by the lack of mutual trust”
3
. The assumption
underlying this proposition is simply that development,
and urban development do not surely make an
exception, requires high levels of cooperation and this,
in turn, implies deep trust ties among economic agents
as well as with these and the political authority.
A convincing perspective for the establishment of
trust networks, is that of promoting the appropriate
conditions acting on constraints and incentives through
political action. In order to promote trust
generalisation several different actions can be taken,
all of which appear to be connected, one way or
another, with the achievement of a more equitable
society. Without rules governing the urban renovation
process, without confidence based on the rule of
democracy, without an overall sense of direction and a
fair degree of equity and transparency, there could be
no well-functioning market forces driving a real
uncontaminated process of reurbanisation towards the
‘harmonious’ city.
Reurbanisation, if it is to flourish, must also work
from shared norms and objectives providing the basis
for a common understanding.
For instance, one cannot hope to generalise trust
if social inequality tends to increase or become
3
K. Arrow, “Gifts and exchanges”, in Philosophy and Public Affairs, 1972,p.343
32
endemic. Decreasing inequalities are a necessary
condition for generating trust. If the aim to be pursued
is also equity viewed as the equality of citizens’
fundamental capabilities, the unequal distribution of
opportunities and income, and the unequal
accumulation of wealth are not the appropriate starting
points for a successful urban policy.
Trust generalisation likewise implies, on the one
hand, higher technical competence levels upon which
trust certification is based - this being the key-role of
the professions and of light urban bureaucracy – and,
on the other hand, that ethic codes adopted by
corporations should reach that critical threshold beyond
which the market can act also as a reputation control
device.
To sum up, the winning strategy to reach an
equitable reurbanisation with generalised trust is to
favour the creation of a new economic space in the
urban development process, that of the civil economy
which is the only mean to get the urban competition
being civilised.
The promotion of the civil economy sphere in the
urban renovation process has here to be intended as the
promotion of the involvement of the growing non-profit
organisations and cooperatives in the urban renewal
process.
33
In short an urban policy aimed to let the city be
reurbanised has thus to pursuit:
™ high economic potential: the creation of a satisfactory
amount of jobs and income is of absolute importance;
™ improvements in quality of the living/working
environment;
™ better accessibility of the city in terms of market
potentials;
™ a balanced social distribution of the effects;
™ community participation.
1.4 A microeconomic foundation for residential
mobility
Much of the theoretical analysis of urban
dynamics, which pay explicit attention to both time and
space, has been attempted only recently. The dynamic
urban process is indeed quite complex. It involves
dynamic changes in a number of key variables such as
population, capital, and labour in the urban economy,
and analysing such changes even at an aggregate level
is difficult enough.