4th Planocosmo (2018)

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TRANSFORMING BEYOND BORDERS, STARTING THE NEW URBAN AGENDA

Objectives:

Economic, social and cultural activities, as well as environmental and human impacts, are increasingly concentrated in and around cities. In the era of planetary urbanization and tech- nological revolution, cities have transformed beyond their proper borders into hinterlands, city-regions, urban corridors, and mega-regions. As a consequence, development challenges have become far more complex than were anticipated in the ‘traditional’ conception of the ‘city’. Transforming beyond their natural and human resources and institutional capacity, cities currently face significant sustainability challenges in terms of governance; land and housing; basic services; food, water and energy security; and disaster risks.

The United Nations Habitat Agenda has set out the New Urban Agenda (NUA), which seeks to create a mutually reinforcing relationship between the trends of urbanization and development. In this context, urbanization will become a parallel vehicle for achieving sustainable develop- ment. The NUA attempts to address the development trends while also recognizing that cities and metropolitan areas are the major drivers of regional, national, and global economies. The idea of the NUA is to offer guidelines on a range of ‘enablers’ that can further strengthen the relationship between urbanization and sustainable development. In this context, infrastructure will be a key vehicle for achieving sustainable urban development.

Currently, the NUA has not been properly recognized and integrated in urban, regional, and infrastructure development strategies. In fact, there is limited recognition of the NUA in the current academic research and policy-making processes. Considering the urgency of the NUA in the planning, development, and governance of contemporary cities, we should start incor- porating the agenda into academic research and policy making, as well as communicating its problems and potential solutions in a scholarly and practically relevant discourse.

The aim of ITB International Conference and Exhibition on Infrastructure Development and the Fourth Planocosmo International Conference are: to discuss about infrastructure and trans- portation issues in the context of New Urban Agenda (NUA): connectivity, inclusiveness, re- silience, security, governance; to propose infrastructure-related technologies and strategies addressing NUA; to connect various stakeholders interested in infrastructure and urban plan- ning, development, and innovations; to market ITB strengths in infrastructure technological and policy innovations. This join conference is a special opening event to commemorate the Centenary of Indonesian Higher Education in Engineering and the 60th Anniversary of Urban and Regional Planning Education in Indonesia. The event is organized by the Regional and City Planning Program under the School of Architecture, Planning and Policy Development, Institut Teknologi Bandung and the Research Center for Infrastructure and Regional Develop- ment, Institut Teknologi Bandung.

Conference Topics:

1. Urban Land and Housing System

Track chairs: Prof. Eugenie L. Birch & Prof. Haryo Winarso

• Housing for everyone

2. Disaster Risk Reduction
Track chairs: Prof. Richard Haigh & Dr. Harkunti Rahayu
  • Megadisasters and challenges
  • Disaster early warning, preparedness,
  • Innovation and technology for housing development prevention, and response & recovery
  • Pre- and/or post-disaster reconstruc-
  • Housing development and finance
  • Mega-urban project and large-scale landtion and rehabilitation planning anddevelopment
  • Urban land managementmanagement
  • Mainstreaming disaster risk reduction
3. Peri-urbanization and Regional Policy
Track chairs: Prof. Tommy Firman & Dr. Shabbir Cheema
  • Peri-urbanization, suburbanization, andinto planning and urban management
  • Business continuity planningpost-suburbanization
  • Metropolitanization, mega-urbanization,

4. Environmental Planning and Management

Track chair: Prof. Arief Rosyidie & Dr. Djoko A. Suroso

  • megapolitanization, and megaregional-
  • Food, water, and energy security and planningization
  • Special zones and regional competitive-
  • Coastal zone management and marine planningness
  • Interlocal, interregional and cross-border
  • Climate change adaptation
  • Socio-ecological resillience
  • Green cities and ecotourism cooperation
  • Globalization, decentralization, rescaling,

Infrastructure provision and management Inclusive and sustainable transportation system
Technology for Intelligent Transportation System (ITS)

5. Rural Transformation and Small Town Planning,

Track chairs: Dr. Li Zhang & Dr. Hastu Prabatmodjo

  • Rural transformation
  • Rural-urban linkages, relations, and integration
  • Small town and medium-sized city planning and reterritorialization

6. Informal Urbanism and Inclusive Development

Track chairs: Dr. Paul Jones & Dr. Sri Maryati

7. Regional Innovation and Smart City System

Track chairs: Prof. Roos Akbar & Dr. Ridwan Sutriadi

  • Slum upgrading and kampong improve- ment
  • Smart city and big data
  • Infrastructure 2.0
  • Planning in a digital era
  • Creativity and innovation
  • Sharing economy and sharing cities
  • Communal infrastructure provision
  • quatting and relocation
  • Pluralism and citizen participation
  • Complexity and self-organization in

8. Infrastructure and Transportation Sys- tem

Track chairs: Prof. Pradono, Dr. Ibnu Syabri & Dr. Tubagus F. Sofhani

  • settlement transition

TRACKS AND CHAIRS

  • Transit Oriented Development (TOD) and
  • compact cities
  • Megaproject planning and management

Co-organized by: College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Tongji University, China

  • Village management and governance
  • Agrarian reform

 Download proceedings here

Journal of Regional and City Planning :

    1. Housing Resilience and the Informal City (Paul Jones)
    2. Social Ties and the Migration Decision of Temporal Migrant Workers (Gunawan Prayitno, Kakuya Matsushima, Kiyoshi Kobayashi)
    3. Feeding the Megacity: Challenges to Achieve Food Security in Jakarta (Dika Fajri Fiisabilillah, Alvaryan Maulana)
    4. Does a Pedestrian Environment Promote Walkability? Auditing a Pedestrian Environment Using the Pedestrian Environmental Data Scan Instrument  (Ramanditya Wimbardana, Ari K. M. Tarigan, Saut Sagala
    5. Changing the Mindset to Encourage Innovation in Resolving Problems in the Built Environment: Exploring the Role of Online Gaming Platforms to Deliver Collaborative Learning and Teaching (Shahed Khan, Julie Brunner, David Gibson)
    6. Mitigating Climate Change Related Floods in Urban Poor Areas: Green Infrastructure Approach (Fahmyddin Araaf Tauhid, Hoferdy Zawani)
    7. Understanding Vertical Urban Development in Changing the Spatial Movement of Residents Using Agent-based Modelling Approach (Agung Wahyudi)
    8. Is Decentralisation Compatible with the Application of Performance Management? The Impacts of Minimum Service Standards on the Motivation of Local Government to Improve Service Delivery in the Indonesian Decentralised System (Mohammad Roudo, Adrian Campbell, Simon Delay)
    9. The Spatial Transformation of Traditional Rural Villages Driven by Private Investment in China’s Developed Areas: The Case of Daxi Village, Anji County (Simin Yan, Chen Chen)
    10. The Changing Structure of China’s Pearl River Delta Megacity Region (Junru Song, Min Zhao)
    11. Historic Institutionalism and Urban Morphology in Jakarta: Moving Towards Building Flood Resiliency into the Formal Planning and Development System (David Wallace Mathewson)
    12. Urban Innovation System and the Role of an Open Web-based Platform: The Case of Amsterdam Smart City (Zulfikar Dinar Wahidayat Putra, Wim GM van der Knaap)
    13. Research on the City Network of Guangdong, Hongkong and Macao from the Perspective of Information Flow: Analysis based on Baidu Index (Qixuan Wang, Min Zhao)
    14. Rethinking Temporary Use Coordinators for the Regeneration of Underused Urban Spaces in Seoul (Kon Kim)
    15. Spatial Structure Remodeling in Yangtze River Delta Region Under High-speed Railway Network Organization (Yishuai Zhang)
    16. The Shaping of Form and Structure in Informal Settlements: A Case Study of Order and Rules in Lebak Siliwangi, Bandung, Indonesia (Paul Jones)
    17. Planning and Implementing Smart Shrinkage of Rural China: The Case of Chengdu’s Rural Settlement Consolidation with SGME Model (Lie You, Chen Chen) 
    18. Inclusiveness in Urban Theory and Urban-Centred International Development Policy (Tim Bunnell)

Some papers are published to  Jurnal of Society for Social Management System