How to involve inhabitants in urban design planning by using digital tools? An overview on a state of the art, key challenges and promising approaches

Sander Münster, Christopher Georgi, Katrina Heijne, Kevin Klamert, Jörg Noennig, Matthias Pump, Benjamin Stelzle, Han van der Meer

    Abstract

    Different cases of public disagreement in different European countries have shown recently that perusing a thorough planning process is by no means a guarantee for a broad public acceptance of an envisioned urban project. Consequently, the employment of digital media and tools to enable participation of inhabitants in urban planning processes on a massive scale is a promising, but currently not comprehensively analyzed approach. Our research activities are intended to gain an overview on a state of the art of research on communication channels, methods and best practices as well as to identify key challenges and promising strategies and tools to overcome these challenges with specific regards to large numbers of users and digital supported approaches. The latter aspects comprise the investigation of phenomena like participant selection, framing effects and gamified approaches for digital-mediated participatory processes as well as native language processing techniques to examine opinions as well as ideas of relevance from massive public feedback. To examine, we performed literature reviews of several hundred research articles, investigated cases in Germany, France and the Netherlands by interviews and workshops with stakeholders and employed methods of prototyping to conceptualize, develop and assess some promising approaches such as sentiment analysis in detail.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)2391-2405
    Number of pages15
    JournalProcedia Computer Science
    Volume112
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2017
    Event21st International Conference on Knowledge - Based and Intelligent Information and Engineering Systems, KES 2017 - Marseille, France
    Duration: 6 Sept 20178 Sept 2017

    Keywords

    • urban planning
    • survey
    • public participation
    • state of the art

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