TY - BOOK ID - 101106690 TI - The project of the soil AU - Peleman, David AU - Corte, Martina Barcelloni AU - Ronner, Elsbeth AU - Viganò, Paola PY - 2021 SN - 9789462086555 9462086559 9789462086821 PB - Rotterdam : nai010 uitgevers, DB - UniCat KW - Land use, Urban. KW - Soil management. KW - Soils KW - Underground areas. KW - Environmental aspects. KW - Urban soils KW - City planning KW - Urban ecological design KW - Cities and towns KW - Civic planning KW - Land use, Urban KW - Model cities KW - Redevelopment, Urban KW - Slum clearance KW - Town planning KW - Urban design KW - Urban development KW - Urban planning KW - Land use KW - Planning KW - Art, Municipal KW - Civic improvement KW - Regional planning KW - Urban policy KW - Urban renewal KW - Government policy KW - Management KW - Ecological design, Urban KW - Ecological landscape design KW - 691.4 KW - 711.4 KW - 72.504 KW - 72.504 Architecture and the environment. Sustainable architecture KW - Architecture and the environment. Sustainable architecture KW - 711.4 Gemeentelijke planologie. Stadsplanning. Stedenbouw KW - Gemeentelijke planologie. Stadsplanning. Stedenbouw KW - 691.4 Earth. Cob. Clayware. Stoneware. Ceramic building materials KW - Earth. Cob. Clayware. Stoneware. Ceramic building materials KW - Environmental planning KW - Physical geography KW - urban studies KW - soil UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:101106690 AB - For a long time, the theme of soil – as matter, not as territory – has been the quasi exclusive subject of agriculture, geography and soil science. Only in the last few decades, due to a rapidly growing awareness of climate change, has soil increasingly come into focus in urban design, in particular as a matter that can also provide ecosystem services in urban environments. Inspired by Bernardo Secchi's 1986 text ‘Progetto di Suolo', this issue of OASE makes a critical analysis of how soil – as an intermediary package that connects surface and subsurface – can further connect to the practices of urbanism and urban design, and how it can guide those practices in exploring new agendas. This issue of OASE makes a critical analysis of how soil connects to urban planning and urban design, and how it can adjust those practices in exploring new agendas. ER -