FactSheet 5.0 Upcoming Cultural Clusters Shape Our Cities! (2014, Vereniging Deltametropool)

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FACTSHEET Nº 5 — 12 | 2014

DELTAMETROPOLIS ASSOCIATION INDEPENDENT NETWORK FOR METROPOLITAN DEVELOPMENT

FOR ASSOCIATION MEMBERS / PARTNERS

UPCOMING CULTURAL CLUSTERS SHAPE OUR CITIES! Rotterdam-Noord

FACTSHEET Nº 5 — 12 | 2014

Van Nelle Ontwerpfabriek

Binnenrotte Schouwburgplein

Witte de Withstraat

Museumpark

Kop van Zuid Deliplein Maassilo

RDM Campus

Number of cultural clusters A look at the map reveals: Rotterdam features very few established cultural interaction environments. If upcoming cases are included, we discover a much broader range of sites activated by cultural use. This FactSheet discusses the potential of upcoming clusters for the application of interaction environments in the planning practice. It takes an in-depth look at the established cluster Schouwburgplein (SBP) and the upcoming cluster Rotterdam-Noord (RDN).

CULTURAL INTERACTION ENVIRONMENTS IN ROTTERDAM established cultural clusters

upcoming cultural clusters

“A cultural cluster has at least three cultural institutions within a walking distance of not more than five minutes from each other, and draws at least 500.000 visitors per year”. Cultural facilities in these kinds of areas are: museums, theatres, music venues, discussion centres and libraries. de Hoog 2013: 47

Are “clusters […] which have not (yet) reached the 500.000 visitors per 5 minute walking distance definition, but are of big influence on the city” . Vereniging Deltametropool 2011: 16


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number of events

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Aert van Nesstraat 45 – 13e etage, 3012 CA Rotterdam PO box 600, 3000 AP Rotterdam, The Netherlands 80

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vironments. Bussum: THOTH Publishers | Vereniging Deltametropool, (2011)

nl | http://zohorotterdam.nl |

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Events are important platforms for displaySCHOUWBURGPL ing cultural products and are therefore critically intertwined with actors at the NOORD sites. n At the same time,SCHOUWBURGPLEIN they are used to introduce newly opened up NOORD realms to users. This graph refers to events in open spaces.

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| de Hoog, M., (2013) The Dutch metropolis: Designing quality interaction en-

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+31 (0)10 7370 340 | www.deltametropool.nl 70 secretariaat@deltametropool.nl

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new walking routes

Creative Services

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Creative Services

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number of events

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and Bauhaus-Universität Weimar.

www.hofbogen.nl| www.schouwburgpleinrotterdam.nl | www.stationhofplein.

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number of spatial interventions

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Arts Report TiP: Cultural Clusters | Interviews July 2014 | www.facebook.com |

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number of spatial interventions

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open plinths

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Isabel Neumann, research for the thesis-project ‘starting from the makers - a stake-

SOURCES

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open plinths

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30 The on-going discussion on cultural interaction environ- Castronomy Castronomy Castronomy ments needs to shift attention from the established clusters 20 other 70 towards the potential in our cities; possess the other public Media & places that other means and actors that leadEnterrainment to their transformation! Isabelpublic10 public 60 private Neumann’s thesis, titled ‘Starting from the makers’ provides Creative Services 0 private private a good starting point for this. Request your copy via the office of Deltametropolis Association! 50

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private

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70

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AUTHOR

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50

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Creative Services

Rotterdam-Noord

walking rou Development of number of events at SBP and new RDN tes

169

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number of spatial interventions

public

80

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ative Services

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other

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private

169

number of events

Different from established clusters, foremost situated in prominent and well maintained city areas, upcoming clusters allocate sites that earlier improved wal have been characterized by decline. These pioneering efforts find their king routes expression in spatial interventions.

private

Creative Arts Services

ate

Schouwburgplein

private

De Hoog’s focus on established cultural clusters pays attention to locations Creative Services NOORD that are characterized by a smallArts number of outstanding cultural faciliArts ties. These are often structurally funded with public money. Upcoming cultural clusters are characterized by a variety Castronomy of smallMedia cultural facilities, & Media & established on an entrepreneurialEnterrainment base. The number of Enterrainment facilities correspond with the number of activities.

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number of events

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2014

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169

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Number of spatial interventions at case studies, 2014

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169

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IMPACT OF CULTURAL CLUSTERS, SCHOUWBURGPLEIN AND ROTTERDAM-NOORD

2012

private

NOORD

a& rainment

Castronomy

A different share of structurally public funded and private organized facilities translates into different activities in the creative sector taking place at the sites. Schouwburgplein shows a high share of classical arts related facilities and exhibits typical inner city functions, such as gastronomy and retail. The upcoming cluster is mainly active in creative production and/or service provision.

Institutional make-up, based on number of structurally funded facilities

RDN

NOORD

other

2011

SBP

Arts

gastronomy

SCHOUWBURGPLEIN SCHOUWBURGPLEIN NOORD public SBP RDN

8

tive ces

169

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2010

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Number of facilities

10

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media & enterntainment

public

COMPOSITION OF CULTURAL CLUSTERS AT SCHOUWBURGPLEIN (SBP) AND private ROTTERDAM-NOORD (RDN)

Rotterdam-Noord creative production & services

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FACTSHEET Nº 5 — 12 | 2014

NOORD

Media & Enterrainment

Schouwburgplein

NOORD

public

N

Activities in cultural industries at SBP and RDN, in number of companies

other

N

Creative Services

UPCOMING CULTURAL CLUSTERS SHAPE OUR CITIES! Interaction environments are a relatively new planning topic in the Netherlands. Maurits de Hoog coined the concept in his book ‘The Dutch Metropolis’, which focuses on the debate on places of encounter. Cultural interaction environments, cultural clusters in his terminology, are open public spaces with major cultural facilities, such as theatres, museums or concert venues. In our cities, these are very important places of encounter, attracting high numbers of visitors. Upcoming cultural clusters mainly consist of private facilities in the creative sector. Although they by far do not reach the visitor numbers de Hoog emphasizes, in many ways they do have a big impact on the urban environment and should thus be considered as areas with potential. Based on our research towards upcoming and established clusters in Rotterdam, we state: “Upcoming cultural interaction environments shape our cities”! This is reflected in: plinths that have been opened up, the establishment of169 new walking routes and new nodes in the ur8 ban network, a general rise in use of the sites - based on the set-up of offices and other businesses - and a rise in events 169 taking place. A closer look at upcoming interaction environments confirms these areas as catalysts for urban development, where entrepreneurs transform formerly secluded urban areas into more coherent and actively used parts of cities. This can be observed very well in Rotterdam.

Castronomy

other

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