Tactical Patterns for Grassroots Urban Repair
Sarah Cooney, Barath Raghavan

TL;DR
This paper proposes a pattern-based planning tool empowering residents to actively participate in urban repair, promoting bottom-up city revitalization through accessible, replicable design patterns demonstrated in Los Angeles case studies.
Contribution
It introduces a novel pattern-based planning approach that shifts urban repair authority from officials to residents, enabling grassroots city revitalization.
Findings
Prototype tool facilitates resident-led urban planning.
Case studies demonstrate successful application in Los Angeles.
Empowers bottom-up urban revitalization efforts.
Abstract
The process of revitalizing cities in the United States suffers from balky and unresponsive processes---de jure egalitarian but de facto controlled and mediated by city officials and powerful interests, not residents. We argue that, instead, our goal should be to put city planning in the hands of the people, and to that end, give ordinary residents pattern-based planning tools to help them redesign (and repair) their urban surrounds. Through this, residents can explore many disparate ideas, try them, and, if successful, replicate them, enabling bottom-up city planning through direct action. We describe a prototype for such a tool that leverages classic patterns to enable city planning by residents, using case studies from Los Angeles as guides for both the problem and potential solution.
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Design and Spatial Analysis · 3D Modeling in Geospatial Applications · Urban Planning and Landscape Design
