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Evaluating long-term urban resilience through an examination of the history of green spaces in Tokyo
Authors:Yoichi Kumagai  Robert B Gibson  Pierre Filion
Institution:1. Department for the Study of Contemporary Society, Shokei Gakuin University, Miyagi, Japan;2. Department of Environment and Resource Studies, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada;3. School of Planning, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Abstract:Long-term urban resilience requires urban systems with the capacity to respond to change and disturbance and to enhance the conditions for lasting wellbeing. Over the past century Tokyo has demonstrated impressive resilience, especially a capacity to reorganise and rebuild in response to successive major disturbances. Throughout these recoveries, the city-region maintained a focus on re-establishing, improving and maintaining international competitiveness through industrial development. Green spaces in Tokyo provided a flexible, but gradually disappearing resource. Today, to meet the needs of its ageing and minimally expanding population for enhanced wellbeing, Tokyo requires active transition planning covering many intertwined factors, but the adaptive capacity provided by the green space resource is no longer available. The Tokyo case underscores the risk inherent in the depletion of non-renewable resources (in this instance, green space) to secure immediate recovery and accommodate growth and short-term resilience at the expense of long-term resilience.
Keywords:long-term urban resilience  adaptation  transition  wellbeing  green space  Tokyo
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