Experimental neighborhood urbanism
Introduction
Urbanism is the study of how inhabitants of urban areas, such as towns and cities, interact with the built environment, over a given period of time. It is a direct component of disciplines such as urban planning, which is the profession that focuses on the physical design and management of urban structures.[1][2][3].
Many architects, economists, geographers, engineers, sociologists, and exclusively urban planners, investigate the way people live in densely populated urban spaces. There is a wide variety of theories and approaches to the study of urban planning.[4] As a whole, it studies the socioeconomic-environmental relationships that take place within the urban phenomenon.
The term urbanism originated at the end of the century with the Catalan civil engineer Ildefonso Cerdá, whose intention was to create an autonomous activity focused on the spatial organization of the city.[5].
Urban planning and town planning
Urban planning is the set of techniques derived from urban planning that serve for urban intervention, in which urban processes are systematized in order to achieve effective urban intervention. There are various currents of urban thinking such as strategic planning, urban planning, urban renewal, among others.[1].
Specifically, it is the urbanization action that intervenes in search of the organization of the city and the territory.
The name of those who dedicate themselves to this profession is urban planners, however according to the standards of the countries and regions these can be called urban planners, urban planning experts, urban planning technicians, cadastral engineers. In many countries, urban planning is a specialization or extension of the planning, geography, architecture or civil engineering professions.
Urban planning is the planning of the various places and environments in which material, sentimental and spiritual life develops in all its manifestations, individual and collective, and includes both urban and rural settlements. Urban planning cannot be subjected exclusively to the rules of free aestheticism but rather its nature is essentially functional.
It is generally understood that urban planning is nothing more than the practice of urban planning, which is the scientific discipline corresponding to the science and art of urban planning. Urbanism has traditionally been associated with planning and architecture in that these disciplines are applied to the set of practical knowledge, which provide the fundamental bases for solving the problems of cities. This duality allows us to glimpse the descriptive and explanatory nature of urban planning as a science versus the prescriptive nature of urban planning as a practice or technique, even as an art, although both approaches are partially correct and feed off each other.[1].