Submit Abstract to Issue:
Temporary Use and Value Creation in Urban Contexts
Academic Editors: Hilde Remøy (TU Delft) and Chiara Mazzarella (TU Delft)
- Submission of Abstracts
- 1-15 June 2025
- Submission of Full Papers
- 15-31 October 2025
- Publication of the Issue
- April/June 2026
Time has become as valuable as space in contemporary cities. The temporary availability of vacant properties has become a precious urban resource, allowing a variety of potential uses. Real estate being a fundamental urban resource, the reuse of vacant real estate is not only a circular practise, but also an open field for experimentation. In fact, several examples of temporary use projects show experiments in vacant space, combining different economic models for the (co-)governance of the space, and generating multiple impacts on the community, real estate, and neighbourhood.
In the gaps between different real estate use cycles, unused spaces constitute an opportunity for urban actors to give room to ideas for various uses based on public/private needs or subjective visions. Research has provided evidence that short-term projects allow to make tests, reactivate unattractive areas, and experiment with adaptations both in buildings and in public space. Short-term uses experiment with innovative approaches, diverse forms of dwelling, creative management, and collaborative initiatives. In this way, diverse forms of placemaking provide a wide range of benefits, but also face drawbacks and risks for the actors involved.
Temporary uses are increasingly included in real estate management and in planning. However, we still lack in-depth research on assessment methods to understand, measure, and evaluate the multiple impacts and values that they generate at different levels and scales.
Thus, this thematic issue seeks to address the following questions:
How does temporality influence real estate, urban development, and local communities? What values emerge from temporary use practises?
Why do diverse urban actors engage in temporary re-uses, and who benefits from them?
What methods can assess temporary use values for real estate management and urban studies?
Starting from these questions, we invite researchers to submit theoretical or case-study-based contributions using qualitative, quantitative, or mixed approaches. We encourage the submission of articles that push the boundaries of how we understand, assess, and manage temporary re-uses and value creation at different scales. The aim is to collect critical perspectives to provide further knowledge for scholars and decision-makers in fields of real estate management, urban planning, and multi-actors’ collaboration, ensuring equity in urban development.
In the gaps between different real estate use cycles, unused spaces constitute an opportunity for urban actors to give room to ideas for various uses based on public/private needs or subjective visions. Research has provided evidence that short-term projects allow to make tests, reactivate unattractive areas, and experiment with adaptations both in buildings and in public space. Short-term uses experiment with innovative approaches, diverse forms of dwelling, creative management, and collaborative initiatives. In this way, diverse forms of placemaking provide a wide range of benefits, but also face drawbacks and risks for the actors involved.
Temporary uses are increasingly included in real estate management and in planning. However, we still lack in-depth research on assessment methods to understand, measure, and evaluate the multiple impacts and values that they generate at different levels and scales.
Thus, this thematic issue seeks to address the following questions:
How does temporality influence real estate, urban development, and local communities? What values emerge from temporary use practises?
Why do diverse urban actors engage in temporary re-uses, and who benefits from them?
What methods can assess temporary use values for real estate management and urban studies?
Starting from these questions, we invite researchers to submit theoretical or case-study-based contributions using qualitative, quantitative, or mixed approaches. We encourage the submission of articles that push the boundaries of how we understand, assess, and manage temporary re-uses and value creation at different scales. The aim is to collect critical perspectives to provide further knowledge for scholars and decision-makers in fields of real estate management, urban planning, and multi-actors’ collaboration, ensuring equity in urban development.
Readers across the globe will be able to access, share, and download this issue entirely for free. Corresponding authors affiliated with any of our institutional members (over 90 institutions worldwide) publish free of charge. Otherwise, an article processing fee will be charged to the authors to cover editorial costs. We defend that authors should not have to personally pay this fee and encourage them to check with their institutions if funds are available to cover open access publication costs. Further information about the journal's open access charges can be found here.
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