Urban planning as management
Introduction
Urban Management is a specialty within the field of urban planning and the urban planning profession, traditionally also studied by architects, engineers and lawyers.
Urban Management includes the set of practices that establish the technical-legal form of executing Urban Plans. Its objective is to explain and coordinate the tasks of the different actors in the process: public administrations, owners, developers and promoters. Answer the following questions:
- Who should pay for the urbanization works? (streets, sewage, water, electricity, connections to existing networks).
- In what terms should these works be executed and under what conditions to ensure that future inhabitants can count on quality services when they settle?
- How do we ensure that citizens have parks and facilities?
- How are both the public interest and those of the different owners guaranteed in these processes?
Compared to urban planning, a set of clearly multidisciplinary practices in the broadest sense of the word, management presents, within the need throughout the urban planning field for a global vision, a much stronger technical and legal dimension. This means that a universal description of management modalities is not possible, but rather it is necessary to establish differences depending on the country or even the region.
Subjects involved in urban management
a) The Public Administrations and the entities dependent on them, as well as the Associations, consortia, managements and commercial companies that include urban management among their purposes.
b) The owners of land affected by urban planning actions", whether individually or associated in a collaborating urban planning entity").
c) The urbanizers"), which are the natural or legal persons, public or private, who, whether or not they are owners of the land affected by an urban planning action, are responsible for its execution, assuming the obligations established in the applicable urban planning and management instruments without prejudice to the fact that the urbanization expenses correspond to the owners.