Creative Cities: Mapping creativity driven cities. Matovic, M., Hernani, A. M., & del Valle, R. S. S. Technical Report Bilbao.
Paper abstract bibtex ABSTRACT: Deusto Cities Lab has recently published a report collecting the experiences of some of the cities member of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network (UCCN) that have developed successful projects to achieve urban transformation, social inclusion, economic development and cultural prosperity through creativity. Based on Deusto Cities Lab’s approach, the document Creative Cities: Mapping creativity driven cities, presents 12 best practices divided into 4 categories: cooperativeness, creativity, cohesion and compactness. This research work contributes to the work that UNESCO is carrying out to identify specific tools to promote, protect and safeguard culture, cultural diversity and creativity as key driving forces for the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals. ANNOTATION: This publication gathers the experiences of 180 Unesco Creative Cities Network (UCCN) cities that have carried out successful projects for urban transformation, social inclusion, economic development and cultural prosperity through creativity. UCCNs centre creativity and cultural industries through local urban development and cooperate within international spheres. The document presents the 12 best practices of the Network’s member cities. Evaluative components of UCCN cities: urban transformation, social inclusion, economic development, and cultural property through creativity are examples of creativity as essential elements in sustainable urban development. Evaluative methodology: multi-dimensional approach to creativity and towards the redefinition of the "creative city" concept. Creative Cohesion Cities: case studies - Budapest, Kobe and Parma - foster social cohesion through creativity that brings citizens together, reinforces their sense of identity and diversity, and foster tolerance and interaction among broad ranges of population groups. - Creative Compact Cities: case studies - Krajow, Ljubljana, and Ulynovsk - are compact and in their creativity account for human security, spatial integration, and connectivity. Best practices that focus on community-based management and public space maintenance. - Creative-Cooperativeness Cities: case studies - Bologna, Dénia, Hangzhou - focus on design as a tool that makes cities attractive, cooperativeness, efficient, liveable; fosters networks, innovation, and creativity; cooperativeness but people and community-centred at the same time. - Creative Governance Cities: case studies - Dunedin, Helsinki, Puebla - focus on "creative" and sustainable urban governance through multi-level and collaborative solutions that help cities learn from the past, create the present, and enable the future, while placing creative fields at the centre of their urban strategy. - Lessons learned: ● Make special programmes and projects that address vulnerable parts of society such as children or elderly people ● Work with specific target group in order to offer tailor-made solutions to their everyday problems ● Think in advance - make long term action plans and projects in order to ensure a successful and long-living creative city ● Think outside the box and overcome the limits of real physical space by using new technologies ● Make your city more compact by decentralisation - go out and work with the suburbs ● Combine a Creative City project with other relevant topics in the city. A city can be a Green, Smart, Creative and Learning city at the same time ● Make sure that local government supports creativity with a proper strategy ● Think how to transfer traditional knowledge to new generations ● Work with universities and other centres of learning ● Use creativity and creative thinking to deal with everyday problems. The solution is sometimes where you least expect it. ● Place citizens at the centre of the local development strategy because human cleverness, desires, motivation, imagination and creativity are crucial resources for modern cities.
@techreport{matovic_creative_nodate,
address = {Bilbao},
title = {Creative {Cities}: {Mapping} creativity driven cities},
shorttitle = {Creative {Cities}},
url = {https://www.deusto.es/cs/Satellite/deusto/en/university-deusto/deusto-a-unique-student-experience/ciudades-creativas-identificacion-de-buenas-practicas-para-la-transformacion-urbana-por-medio-de-la-creatividad-0/noticia},
abstract = {ABSTRACT: Deusto Cities Lab has recently published a report collecting the experiences of some of the cities member of the UNESCO Creative Cities Network (UCCN) that have developed successful projects to achieve urban transformation, social inclusion, economic development and cultural prosperity through creativity. Based on Deusto Cities Lab’s approach, the document Creative Cities: Mapping creativity driven cities, presents 12 best practices divided into 4 categories: cooperativeness, creativity, cohesion and compactness. This research work contributes to the work that UNESCO is carrying out to identify specific tools to promote, protect and safeguard culture, cultural diversity and creativity as key driving forces for the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals.
ANNOTATION: This publication gathers the experiences of 180 Unesco Creative Cities Network (UCCN) cities that have carried out successful projects for urban transformation, social inclusion, economic development and cultural prosperity through creativity. UCCNs centre creativity and cultural industries through local urban development and cooperate within international spheres. The document presents the 12 best practices of the Network’s member cities. Evaluative components of UCCN cities: urban transformation, social inclusion, economic development, and cultural property through creativity are examples of creativity as essential elements in sustainable urban development. Evaluative methodology: multi-dimensional approach to creativity and towards the redefinition of the "creative city" concept.
Creative Cohesion Cities: case studies - Budapest, Kobe and Parma - foster social cohesion through creativity that brings citizens together, reinforces their sense of identity and diversity, and foster tolerance and interaction among broad ranges of population groups.
- Creative Compact Cities: case studies - Krajow, Ljubljana, and Ulynovsk - are compact and in their creativity account for human security, spatial integration, and connectivity. Best practices that focus on community-based management and public space maintenance.
- Creative-Cooperativeness Cities: case studies - Bologna, Dénia, Hangzhou - focus on design as a tool that makes cities attractive, cooperativeness, efficient, liveable; fosters networks, innovation, and creativity; cooperativeness but people and community-centred at the same time.
- Creative Governance Cities: case studies - Dunedin, Helsinki, Puebla - focus on "creative" and sustainable urban governance through multi-level and collaborative solutions that help cities learn from the past, create the present, and enable the future, while placing creative fields at the centre of their urban strategy.
- Lessons learned:
● Make special programmes and projects that address vulnerable parts of society such as children or elderly people
● Work with specific target group in order to offer tailor-made solutions to their everyday problems
● Think in advance - make long term action plans and projects in order to ensure a successful and long-living creative city
● Think outside the box and overcome the limits of real physical space by using new technologies
● Make your city more compact by decentralisation - go out and work with the suburbs
● Combine a Creative City project with other relevant topics in the city. A city can be a Green, Smart, Creative and Learning city at the same time
● Make sure that local government supports creativity with a proper strategy
● Think how to transfer traditional knowledge to new generations
● Work with universities and other centres of learning
● Use creativity and creative thinking to deal with everyday problems. The solution is sometimes where you least expect it.
● Place citizens at the centre of the local development strategy because human cleverness, desires, motivation, imagination and creativity are crucial resources for modern cities.},
language = {en},
urldate = {2021-05-26},
author = {Matovic, Milica and Hernani, Anartz Madariaga and del Valle, Roberto Sal Salvador},
keywords = {accessible (indicator), artistic and creative practise (indicator), culture (indicator), development, diversity (indicator), governance, hubs, social (indicator)},
}
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Based on Deusto Cities Lab’s approach, the document Creative Cities: Mapping creativity driven cities, presents 12 best practices divided into 4 categories: cooperativeness, creativity, cohesion and compactness. This research work contributes to the work that UNESCO is carrying out to identify specific tools to promote, protect and safeguard culture, cultural diversity and creativity as key driving forces for the 2030 Agenda and the Sustainable Development Goals. ANNOTATION: This publication gathers the experiences of 180 Unesco Creative Cities Network (UCCN) cities that have carried out successful projects for urban transformation, social inclusion, economic development and cultural prosperity through creativity. UCCNs centre creativity and cultural industries through local urban development and cooperate within international spheres. The document presents the 12 best practices of the Network’s member cities. 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