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Full Description
Placemaking is a popular approach to creating or fostering appealing, livable communities. This book addresses the critical gap in placemaking evaluation by providing methodologies and practical tools for developing holistic and consistent approaches to measuring the impacts of placemaking projects. The authors integrate history and theory of placemaking and evaluation with the practice of reporting the impacts of unique and individual placemaking projects to stakeholders, enhancing public accountability and transparency. Chapters provide a comprehensive framework for designing evaluation systems tailored to various placemaking projects, integrating both qualitative and quantitative research methods. This book is essential for scholars, practitioners, and stakeholders of placemaking projects, and students in urban planning, urban design, and public administration courses.
Contents
Part I. The theory and practice of placemaking 1. A brief history of placemaking 2. Towards a theory of placemaking 3. Placemaking: Cross-sector collaboration and requirements 4. Evaluating placemaking: Ensuring transparency and accountability 5. Evaluation design and research methods Part II. Placemaking Policy and Politics 6. State-level policies, programs, and evaluation 7. Evaluating rural placemaking: The role of partnerships in building community and assessing impact 8. Municipal placemaking initiatives and evaluation 9. Cross-sector placemaking collaborations and evaluation Part III. Developing a customized evaluation plan 10. How to develop a customized evaluation system to measure placemaking impact 11. Conclusion



