Exclosure from the City - Francesco Procacci
In our podcast with Francesco Procacci, a problem of increasing importance for city cohesion has been addressed: the compound settlement for a gated community, and its effects on overall city cohesion and sociability. Francesco is an Italian urban designer, planner, and independent researcher whose work explores the relationship between cities, public life, ecology, and social structures. He has a vast professional experience as an urban master planner and landscape strategist (including the urban landscape), he collaborated with developers, institutions, and architects on large-scale urban projects in Southeast Asia and Europe. His aim is to achieve urban places that are liveable and meaningful, considering the social dimension of planning. Through essays, visual storytelling, and urban design practice, his work investigates themes such as neighborhood design, ecological urbanism, gated communities, and the future of public space. His approach combines direct field experience with a strong interest in the cultural and human dimensions of cities.
Compound settlement vs. community embodies two basic models, contradictory in practice, for the city of the future. An important aspect of compound development is the distraction of infrastructural supplies from the surrounding city, and its lack of profitability in the long run since the surrounding infrastructure has the tendency to deteriorate, due to demographic and economic reasons. Opposed to the compound, the neighbourhood is the base for future liveable cities.