TY - BOOK ID - 103615380 TI - Service Design for Urban Commons AU - Meroni, Anna AU - Selloni, Daniela PY - 2022 SN - 3031060342 3031060350 PB - Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, DB - UniCat KW - City planning. KW - Sustainable urban development. KW - Design. KW - Creation (Literary, artistic, etc.) KW - Environmentally sustainable urban development KW - City planning KW - Sustainable development 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 - Sociology, Urban. KW - Industries. KW - Technological innovations. KW - Buildings KW - Urban Sociology. KW - Innovation and Technology Management. KW - Building Construction and Design. KW - Design and construction. KW - Breakthroughs, Technological KW - Innovations, Industrial KW - Innovations, Technological KW - Technical innovations KW - Technological breakthroughs KW - Technological change KW - Creative ability in technology KW - Inventions KW - Domestication of technology KW - Innovation relay centers KW - Research, Industrial KW - Technology transfer KW - Industrial production KW - Industries, Primitive KW - Industry KW - Economics KW - Urban sociology UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:103615380 AB - This book explores the application of service design to urban commons. It originates from a project developed by the research group of POLIMI DESIS Lab of Politecnico di Milano, aimed at imagining the future of the Reggio Emilia Ducal Palace and its park - the Reggia di Rivalta. The peculiarity of the project lays in the idea that the design of a (public) space should be informed by the design of its services, because the development of specific activities actually builds a fundamental part of the identity of a place, conceiving both the tangible and intangible dimensions as part of a single creative process. The combination of a participatory process and the integration of spatial and service design led to infrastructuring a multi-stakeholder participatory action research of envisioning the future of a public good. This effort has been thus framed into a working methodology, specific tools and progressive outputs, which are defined as Service Master Planning (the process), and Service Master Plan (the product), allowing service design professionals to expand their knowledge and develop skills for a new field of application connected to urban planning. ER -