Sustainable rural development in Germany was examined by linking conceptual and applied
aspects of the land and housing question, broadly considering the ownership, use, and regulation
of land. In the state of Bavaria, a new interagency initiative aims to curb land consumption by
persuading villagers to embrace rural infill development. The study explored the background debate
leading up to the Space-saving Offensive (Flächensparoffensive), the resource providers involved,
and the options for funding actual rural infill building and renovation projects. Here, space-saving
managers and other resource providers actively promote the positive societal meaning of central infill
sites in contrast to unsustainable land consumption. In addition to the communications campaign,
planning, regulatory, and funding interventions round out the multi-level initiative, as described in
this study. A modern barn reuse exemplifies the Bavarian bundle of resources, while demonstrating
how modern village infill redevelopment also contests oversimplified notions of stagnant rural
peripheries. The initiative’s focus on linking key resources and bolstering communications can be
read as validation for a more social perspective on land consumption and village infill development.
Titel | Lessons in Rural Persuasion: Village Infill Development in Bavaria, Germany |
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Medien | Sustainability |
Verlag | MDPI |
Heft | 11 |
Band | 12 |
ISBN | ISSN: 2071-1050 |
Verfasser/Herausgeber | Prof. Dr. Jennifer Gerend |
Seiten | 1-14 |
Veröffentlichungsdatum | 19.10.2020 |
Projekttitel | --- |
Zitation | Gerend, J. (2020): Lessons in Rural Persuasion: Village Infill Development in Bavaria, Germany. Sustainability 12, 8678 (11), S. 1-14. DOI: 10.3390/su12208678 |