ABSTRACT
This paper is a think piece about planning and constructing built environments and infrastructure for healthy cities and communities founded on combinations of different types of knowledge and ways of knowing that include creative thinking. Hence, different disciplinary skills and competences should be interrelated, synthesized and applied creatively in complementary ways during concerted action between consortia of researchers, practitioners and representatives of civil society. Disciplines and professions should recognize the necessity of collective thinking that creatively combines knowledge, skills and competences in novel ways that respond to persistent problems in cities harmful to planetary health and human well-being. The paper discusses the dialectical and virtuous relations between discipline-based knowledge, profession-based know-how, and the ways of knowing of citizens. Then it advocates a mutual exchange between different types knowledge and ways of knowing by transdisciplinary contributions, because they enable a shared understanding of a problematic situation before it is changed. Creative and imaginative thinking are necessary to synthesize different types of knowledge and ways of knowing. This kind of contribution is illustrated by two large urban projects: the community-led Ringland Project for road traffic in Antwerp, Belgium, and the co-creation of a new housing cooperative in Zurich, Switzerland. Both projects have direct and indirect impacts on health.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes
1. Mistra Urban Futures, https://www.mistraurbanfutures.org/en
2. Ringland Project, Antwerp, Belgium, https://ringland.be/about/the-project/
3. Mehr als Wohnen Housing Cooperative, Zurich, https://www.mehralswohnen.ch/
4. https://sfdora.org/, accessed on 18.11.2019
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Roderick J. Lawrence
Roderick J. Lawrence B. Arch (Hons), M.Litt, D.Sc., was nominated Professor in the Faculty of Economic and Social Sciences at the University of Geneva, Switzerland in 1999. He was promoted to Honorary Professor in October 2015. He was Visiting Professor at the Institute for Global Health at the United Nations University (UNU-IIGH) from 2014 to 2016. He is a Member of the Scientific Advisory Board of the Swiss Academies of Arts and Sciences Network for Interdisciplinary and Transdisciplinary Research since 2009.