LDE PortCityFutures

The LDE PortCityFutures research program contributes to the new LDE strategy in multiple ways. It brings together researchers from humanities, social and design sciences in the LDE who are eager to collaborate. It focuses on the particularities of the port city region where these three universities are located. The Port of Rotterdam, its neighboring cities and municipalities, the Province of South Holland and in fact the greater region are a key example of the challenges of port-city-region interconnections and a place where key transitions need inclusive approaches to develop. Changes in work, production or environmental systems of the port have repercussions throughout the region. Decisions made for the Rotterdam region are interconnected with transformations in other port city regions around the world. Addressing these challenges in and for South Holland provides insights for port city regions globally. To fully understand the developments in the LDE region, we propose comparison of global port city regions.

Port cities are internationally connected. What happens in Rotterdam and its hinterland reflects extraction, production, and distribution processes around the world. Studying global examples, including Tokyo (Japan), Sekondi-Takoradi (Ghana), Philadelphia or Savannah (US), where members of our group are working, will help us understand socio-spatial processes in which local communities and urban development, have become implicated in global processes. Cruise shipping, gold extraction, offshore oil-drilling have created intersections between national and global interests, and questions of distribution of opportunities and wealth. Port throughput triggers debates about the distribution of wealth locally and internationally, and about the way the dynamics in this port city relate to wider issues of regional development. Studies of port city regions that focus on the interconnections around the world, taking a scalar perspective, zooming in and out of places, connectivity's and forms of collaboration and contestation can provide novel insights for all places involved.

Through its topical focus on port city regions both locally and globally, its integration of humanities, social, and design sciences and its focus on culture and value, this proposal connects to, but doesn’t overlap with other LDE initiatives.

Facts

Funder: LDE university consortium
Programme: Port CityFutures
Overall budget: € 351.000
Grant amount: € 351.000
Role TU Delft:  Host institute
Project duration: February 2020 - mid 2024
TU Delft researchers:                 Prof.dr.ing Carola M. Hein
Dr.ir. Maurice G.A. Harteveld
Dr. Ingrid J. Mulder
Dr. Reinout J. Rutte
Thomas van den Brink
Yvonne van Mil
Stephan Hauser
Penglin Zhu
Rachel Lee
Dan Baciu
Tianchen Dai
Paolo De Martino

Project partners

Leiden University, Erasmus University, University of Ljubljana