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Analysing, assessing and safeguarding Alpine open spaces through spatial planning

[collection]

Job, Hubert
Mayer, Marius
Haßlacher, Peter
Nischik, Gero
Knauf, Christoph
Pütz, Marco
Essl, Josef
Marlin, Andreas
Kopf, Manfred
Obkircher, Stefan
(ed.)

Corporate Editor
ARL - Akademie für Raumentwicklung in der Leibniz-Gemeinschaft

Abstract

Alpine open spaces are becoming noticeably scarcer. In the Alps, this applies to the inherently limited area of permanent settlement, which in the case of Tyrol covers only 11.8%. The population is growing in many of the valleys and with it the infrastructure it requires. However, the open spaces at... view more

Alpine open spaces are becoming noticeably scarcer. In the Alps, this applies to the inherently limited area of permanent settlement, which in the case of Tyrol covers only 11.8%. The population is growing in many of the valleys and with it the infrastructure it requires. However, the open spaces at higher altitudes are also being successively fragmented and equipped with infrastructure (e.g. cable cars, hydro-electric plants) or subjected to increasingly intensive use (e.g. with electric mountain bikes). The preservation of open spaces in the Alps began in Bavaria as early as 1972 with the implementation of the Alpine Plan, which established spatial planning objec-tives. The Alpine Plan divided Bavaria's Alpine region into three zones of varying traffic intensity, a true legislative innovation. Zone C was intended for nature conservation, which was still in its infancy at that time, and also aimed to reduce natural Alpine hazards. Primarily, however, this planning initiative was related to the role of the landscape as a setting for recreation in open spaces, i.e. leisure and tourism activities in natural surroundings. Today, there are similar, more or less successful initiatives in all of the German-speaking Alpine states and Switzerland. This publication aims to analyse, compare and describe these initiatives and to critically assess how they are formulated, how they work, and how they are implemented by planners. As the preservation of open spaces is a transnational issue, especially in the Alps, which are intersected by many political borders, we also address the framework provisions of the internationally binding Alpine Convention of 1991 and examine the new EU initiative EUSALP and its potential impact. The focus here, however, is on bringing together approaches for preserving open space for people (local inhabitants and their traditional economic activities, but also visitors) and their natural heritage. We present and critically evaluate present-day spatial planning practices related to Alpine open spaces in the German-speaking Alpine region and in Switzerland, and discuss future options for harmonising approaches across borders.... view less

Keywords
Alps; land utilization; population density; spatial planning; conservation; statuary regulation; landscape planning; cross-border cooperation; German-speaking area; Switzerland; tourism

Classification
Area Development Planning, Regional Research
Ecology, Environment

Free Keywords
Alpine open spaces; GIS analysis; open space analysis

Document language
English

Publication Year
2021

Publisher
Verlag der ARL

City
Hannover

Page/Pages
94 p.

Series
Forschungsberichte der ARL, 18

ISBN
978-3-88838-107-2

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.