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Original Articles

Transformations of Modern Infrastructure Planning in Rural Regions: The Case of Water Infrastructures in Brandenburg, Germany

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Pages 1499-1516 | Received 01 Sep 2009, Accepted 01 Jul 2010, Published online: 22 Aug 2011
 

Abstract

Despite profound transformations of spatial development patterns, the “modern infrastructure ideal” of universal and standardized supply with infrastructure services continues to play an important role in discussions on the future of rural infrastructures in shrinking regions of East Germany. Regional planners have reacted to current demographic, socio-economic and environmental transformations by scrutinizing infrastructure standards, but have only begun to reflect upon enhancing the flexibility of infrastructure systems themselves. Until recently, infrastructure planning was treated as a more or less technical and economic problem, without taking into proper account regional specificities and local non-expert knowledge. This paper suggests that flexible, regionally specific and participatory approaches may offer opportunities for innovative and sustainable planning solutions also applicable beyond the infrastructure sector. Referring to the difficult case of the transformation of water supply and waste water disposal systems of Brandenburg in north-eastern Germany, the paper discusses (1) the mismatch between established infrastructure-related planning rationales and current planning problems and (2) potential guidelines that may be constitutive for sustainable water infrastructure planning in the future. These guidelines lead to more general reflections on how infrastructure planning may be conceptualized in view of transforming demographic, environmental and socio-economic conditions.

Acknowledgements

The paper is based on research undertaken in the context of the interdisciplinary working group Global change—regional development at the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities. We thank the members of the working group and the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities for their kind support. We also thank Thomas Chlod of the Joint Spatial Planning Department of Berlin and Brandenburg for the provision of Figure 2 in English.

Notes

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