Published August 1, 2018 | Version Original
Journal article Open

Planning for agglomeration economies in a polycentric region: Envisioning an efficient metropolitan core area in Flanders

  • 1. Cosmopolis Centre for Urban Research - Department of Geography, Vrije Universiteit
  • 2. Department of Geography, Loughborough University
  • 3. Cosmopolis Centre for Urban Research - Department of Geography, Vrije Universiteit
  • 4. Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment
  • 5. Department of Geography, Ghent University
  • 6. Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment

Description

To some degree, metropolitan regions owe their existence to the ability to valorize agglomeration economies. The general perception is that agglomeration economies increase with city size, which is why economists tend to propagate urbanization, in this case in the form of metropolization. Contrarily, spatial planners traditionally emphasize the negative consequences of urban growth in terms of liveability, environmental quality, and congestion. Polycentric development models have been proposed as a specific form of metropolization that allow for both agglomeration economies and higher levels of liveability and sustainability. This paper addresses the challenge of how such polycentric development can be achieved in planning practice. We introduce ‘agglomeration potential maps’ that visualize potential locations in a polycentric metropolitan area where positive agglomeration externalities can be optimized. These maps are utilized in the process of developing a new spatial vision for Flanders’ polycentric ‘metropolitan core area’, commonly known as the Flemish Diamond. The spatial vision aspires to determine where predicted future population growth in the metropolitan core area could best be located, while both optimizing positive agglomeration externalities and maintaining its small-scale morphological character. Based on a literature review of optimum urban-size thresholds and our agglomeration potential maps, we document how such maps contributed to developing this spatial vision for the Flemish metropolitan core area.

Notes

The paper is published by the European Journal of Spatial Development (EJSD).

The previous version of the journal was host by Nordregio.

The same version of the paper can also be found in NordPub.

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