4.2 Article

Assessing impacts of PPGIS on urban land use planning: evidence from Finland and Poland

Journal

EUROPEAN PLANNING STUDIES
Volume 30, Issue 8, Pages 1529-1548

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09654313.2021.1882393

Keywords

PPGIS; public participation; land use planning; SoftGIS; geo-questionnaire

Funding

  1. Narodowe Centrum Badan i Rozwoju [PBS3/A9/39/2015]
  2. Strategic Research Council
  3. Academy of Finland [313014]
  4. Academy of Finland (AKA) [313014, 313014] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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A study assessed the influence of Public Participation Geographic Information Systems (PPGIS) on land use planning cases in Finland and Poland, finding that PPGIS usage at the beginning of planning, high participant diversity and data quality could impact planning documents. Conversely, mismatches in plan scope, legal constraints, lack of coordination, and data representativeness can weaken PPGIS influence on planning decisions.
Knowledge on when, where and how Public Participation Geographic Information Systems (PPGIS) influence planning decisions has been spotty and incomplete. To fill the gap, we assessed the influence of public land use preferences, obtained through PPGIS, on selected land use planning cases in Finland and Poland. The selected cases ranged in scale from a neighbourhood to an entire city and involved two types of online PPGIS tools: an interactive map-based questionnaire and a map-based discussion platform. The assessment was based on a qualitative framework organizing potential drivers of the planning process into convening, process and outcome aspects. The assessments results show high number and diversity of participants, the use of PPGIS in the beginning of the planning process, and the quality of PPGIS data representing public land use preferences may influence the content of planning documents. Conversely, a mismatch between plan scope and citizen concerns, legal framework constraints, lack of coordination between overlapping participatory and decision-making processes, and low representativeness of PPGIS data diminish the influence of PPGIS on planning decisions.

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