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Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting: From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study)

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting: From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study). / Henriques, Diogo; Dalton, Ruth; Greenhalgh, Paul.
Urban Living Labs for Public Space : A New Generation of Planning?. Belgium: Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, 2017. p. 121-128.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Henriques, D, Dalton, R & Greenhalgh, P 2017, Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting: From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study). in Urban Living Labs for Public Space : A New Generation of Planning?. Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Belgium, pp. 121-128. <http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/32835/>

APA

Henriques, D., Dalton, R., & Greenhalgh, P. (2017). Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting: From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study). In Urban Living Labs for Public Space : A New Generation of Planning? (pp. 121-128). Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. http://nrl.northumbria.ac.uk/32835/

Vancouver

Henriques D, Dalton R, Greenhalgh P. Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting: From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study). In Urban Living Labs for Public Space : A New Generation of Planning?. Belgium: Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. 2017. p. 121-128

Author

Henriques, Diogo ; Dalton, Ruth ; Greenhalgh, Paul. / Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting : From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study). Urban Living Labs for Public Space : A New Generation of Planning?. Belgium : Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, 2017. pp. 121-128

Bibtex

@inbook{881cb01bcafa41bca5b5c356f17f500a,
title = "Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting: From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study)",
abstract = "During the 20th century, several top-down urban visions were proposed by distinct stakeholders interested in urban processes, and some of those visions were actually planned, built, and can be experienced today as best practice examples of urban planning around the world. While some of those topdown visions for cities allowed global innovations in such fields as politics, economy, and urban planning, they also triggered a reaction of bottom-up approaches that promoted local and neighbourhood engagement, which can be traced until today. Furthermore, new generations of researchers and practitioners continue to advance the field of urban planning, in order to determine its present and future impact. How can we measure the impact of future urban visions? Which evaluation methods, from such fields as cognitive sciences and human computer interaction, could advance participatory planning processes for public spaces in local contexts? In this paper, we describe a pilot study that aims to experiment evaluation methods of public participation for future urban visions. We present methods and results of this study with postgraduate students from distinct disciplinary backgrounds at Northumbria University (UK), and we discuss further methods to measure the impact of future visions. Finally, we sketch further work supporting creativity within participation processes for tomorrow{\textquoteright}s cities.",
keywords = "Cities, creativity, evaluation methods, public spaces, urban visions",
author = "Diogo Henriques and Ruth Dalton and Paul Greenhalgh",
year = "2017",
month = apr,
day = "1",
language = "English",
isbn = "9789082510898",
pages = "121--128",
booktitle = "Urban Living Labs for Public Space",
publisher = " Katholieke Universiteit Leuven",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Measuring the Impact of Future Visions through Card Sorting

T2 - From User Experience to Participatory Planning (a Pilot Study)

AU - Henriques, Diogo

AU - Dalton, Ruth

AU - Greenhalgh, Paul

PY - 2017/4/1

Y1 - 2017/4/1

N2 - During the 20th century, several top-down urban visions were proposed by distinct stakeholders interested in urban processes, and some of those visions were actually planned, built, and can be experienced today as best practice examples of urban planning around the world. While some of those topdown visions for cities allowed global innovations in such fields as politics, economy, and urban planning, they also triggered a reaction of bottom-up approaches that promoted local and neighbourhood engagement, which can be traced until today. Furthermore, new generations of researchers and practitioners continue to advance the field of urban planning, in order to determine its present and future impact. How can we measure the impact of future urban visions? Which evaluation methods, from such fields as cognitive sciences and human computer interaction, could advance participatory planning processes for public spaces in local contexts? In this paper, we describe a pilot study that aims to experiment evaluation methods of public participation for future urban visions. We present methods and results of this study with postgraduate students from distinct disciplinary backgrounds at Northumbria University (UK), and we discuss further methods to measure the impact of future visions. Finally, we sketch further work supporting creativity within participation processes for tomorrow’s cities.

AB - During the 20th century, several top-down urban visions were proposed by distinct stakeholders interested in urban processes, and some of those visions were actually planned, built, and can be experienced today as best practice examples of urban planning around the world. While some of those topdown visions for cities allowed global innovations in such fields as politics, economy, and urban planning, they also triggered a reaction of bottom-up approaches that promoted local and neighbourhood engagement, which can be traced until today. Furthermore, new generations of researchers and practitioners continue to advance the field of urban planning, in order to determine its present and future impact. How can we measure the impact of future urban visions? Which evaluation methods, from such fields as cognitive sciences and human computer interaction, could advance participatory planning processes for public spaces in local contexts? In this paper, we describe a pilot study that aims to experiment evaluation methods of public participation for future urban visions. We present methods and results of this study with postgraduate students from distinct disciplinary backgrounds at Northumbria University (UK), and we discuss further methods to measure the impact of future visions. Finally, we sketch further work supporting creativity within participation processes for tomorrow’s cities.

KW - Cities

KW - creativity

KW - evaluation methods

KW - public spaces

KW - urban visions

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9789082510898

SP - 121

EP - 128

BT - Urban Living Labs for Public Space

PB - Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

CY - Belgium

ER -