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Case: FairShare

Measuring social sustainability in Arvika
Urban Development
Process & Dialogue
Client: Arvika Municipality
Location: Arvika
Project years: 2021–2023

Arvika Municipality’s new comprehensive plan has been adopted, becoming the first in Sweden to be certified in equality. The FairShare method systematically addresses discrimination and promotes human rights to build a more socially sustainable society. But what does it mean to certify a comprehensive plan, and what outcomes can we expect? Let’s find out!

Ida Svensson, Head of Urban Development, Arvika

The comprehensive plan includes six equality commitments focusing on inclusion and participation. By prioritizing groups such as children, young people, and the elderly, the municipality aims to create added value for the entire community.

“For instance, improving public transport in Arvika could reduce loneliness among the elderly while benefiting other groups in the municipality,” says Ida Svensson, Director of Urban Development for Arvika Municipality.

Step one: analysis

The FairShare process began with a thorough analysis of the municipality’s current situation, based on statistics, strategic documents, and interviews.

Children and young people were a central focus of the analysis, particularly regarding democratic issues where their voices were often unheard, and educational and socioeconomic disparities between young men and women.

“We examined how they live, the groups they align with, and noted that girls generally pursue higher education and often move away after graduating,” says Ida. “We identified ingrained norms within the municipality and a tendency for individuals to remain in their initial social groups, like the ‘football group.’”

FairShare as a framework

FairShare provides guidelines for integrating equality into urban development processes and ensuring social sustainability. This includes both guidance and specifications to support systematic efforts. Developed in collaboration with Helsingborg Municipality, the Raoul Wallenberg Institute, RISE, and Tengbom, the certification addresses gaps in tools for municipal equality planning.

“The pre-study for FairShare revealed that municipalities lack tools to concretely incorporate equality into planning processes, especially in working towards global goals,” says Ulrika Signal, Planning Architect at Tengbom. “While there is strong intent, the gap between intention and implementation is evident.”

The system has two parts:

Guidance (Project Report): This includes methods and techniques for ensuring the necessary competence to work with equality in urban planning, alongside tools like site analysis, norm analysis, and dimensioning tools.

Equality Work Specifications: These provide support and requirements for systematic efforts and process management.

Collecting facts and analyzing inequality

Arvika Municipality conducted a comprehensive equality analysis, revealing disparities in access to services and opportunities. Dialogues with residents highlighted the need for more activities and meeting places.

The analysis identified divides between urban and rural areas, “new” and “long-established” Swedes, and conflicting interests like “high culture” versus “car culture.” Challenges also included mental health issues, particularly loneliness among elderly residents.

Engaging all perspectives

Engaging citizens early in the planning process is crucial, though often challenging. Arvika adopted an outreach strategy to include all groups in the FairShare process.

“Before consultations, we visited schools, met with the municipal pensioners’ council, visited care homes, and organized pizza nights for young people,” says Ida Svensson. “We also held workshops with local associations and businesses.”

Dialogues revealed issues like limited service access in rural areas and transport challenges for young people and the elderly. Young people expressed a need for unstructured, inclusive spaces, while initiatives like opening church facilities addressed specific needs.

Prioritizing groups to benefit all

Based on the collected data, Arvika Municipality prioritized children, young people, and the elderly in its equality work. This led to six measurable equality commitments integrated into the comprehensive plan, guiding future detailed planning and investment decisions.

A compass for social sustainability

The comprehensive plan serves as a strategic guide for the municipality’s future development, feeding into budget processes and strategic plans.

“The analysis could have been conducted independently, but the FairShare framework systematizes the work,” says Ida. “It puts these efforts on an agenda, ensuring compliance with conventions like the UN’s Convention on the Rights of the Child.”

Arvika strives for fair, socially sustainable urban planning with ongoing assessments and reviews.

“The FairShare process has pushed our boundaries,” says Ida Svensson. “We now have a clear plan to follow up on.”

“Arvika’s work with FairShare demonstrates how clear goals and concrete efforts for social sustainability can inspire other municipalities,” says Ulrika Signal.

Equality commitments

Contact person

Ulrika Signal

+46 70 827 46 45

Härmälänranta

A deliberate process
Urban Development
Plan & programs, Process & Dialogue
Client: Skanska Kodit
Location: Tammerfors, Finland
Years of Commission: 2012-2014
Type of project: Urban Development
Area: 250,000 square metres GFA
Competences: Urban development, landscape, housing, building preservation, 3D/visualisation

Härmälänranta is a brand new district taking shape in the city of Tampere, Finland, driven by the objective to have the strongest environmental profile in the country. Our urban development mandate has resulted in a shorter planning process and a more flexible zoning plan – vital components for a district in which quality is paramount.

Beside the water, a couple of kilometres south west of central Tampere, Skanska Kodit is engaged in the development of the new environmentally profiled district of Härmälänranta – a natural step in the city’s climate programme, the aim of which is to achieve carbon-dioxide neutrality. In addition to 1,500 residences, the area will be home to a mix of commercial and public services, workplaces, public parks and squares, a beach and piers combined with developments of cultural-historical significance.

Härmälänranta
Illustration: Tengbom

A clear identity

We envisage Härmälänranta as a vibrant urban district with a clear identity. The area is situated in a historically significant part of Tampere, and integrating existing developments of cultural-historical importance with the new, urban environment is paramount. Our proposed new development encompasses several different functions, sites and housing, combining a variety of volumes, topologies and styles. In the centre of the area, we are proposing an activity link, that is, a central thoroughfare incorporating various public functions that links Härmälänranta to the surrounding districts. Moreover, the beaches are made accessible through promenades, piers and visiting places as well as restaurants and retail outlets.

We sought to discuss quality ahead of quantity.

Effective processes and flexibility

Our urban development mandate has been stimulating and far reaching. In addition to performing analysis and conceptual work, we have devised a master plan that includes the configuration principles that form the basis of a new zoning plan. We also drew up a design concept for the first four districts, based on the master plan, and carried out a special study of the proposal’s tall buildings.

Härmälänranta
Illustration: Tengbom

Within the scope of our master plan, we have also devised a model for surface water management in the area and carried out a sociotope study of the area’s public spaces.

Early in the project, we partnered with Skanska Kodit to present our vision for Härmälänranta to the Municipality of Tampere. Recognizing the area’s potential, we saw fantastic opportunities for development. Moreover, we prioritized quality over quantity from the start. We created a platform to preserve the fundamental qualities of a long-term development. By pursuing a shared and ambitious goal for Härmälänranta, we significantly shortened the planning process. This approach also resulted in a zoning plan with greater flexibility than usual.

It is necessary to have insight into the wide range of perspectives within the project. Not only the client or developer’s, but the users’, that is, those living and working in the new area.

Insight into the complexity of urban development

Taking on an urban development project requires a deep understanding of conditions, challenges and opportunities. It is necessary to have insight into the wide range of perspectives within the project – not only the client or developer’s, but the users’, that is, those living and working in the new area.

Illustration: Tengbom
Illustration: Tengbom

Urban development projects come with the challenge of creating a vibrant, mixed-use city within a relatively short timeframe. To address this, we have defined guidelines for each stage of the project. These so-called design codes ensure quality, flexibility, and long-term sustainability. With great care, we have successfully driven this process forward. Rather than controlling every design detail, we have focused on defining the necessary functions and qualities. This approach ensures that the urban environment aligns with the shared vision for Härmälänranta.

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

+46 8 412 53 43

Hammarby Sjöstad/Sustainable City

Sustainable district creates inspiration worldwide
Architecture, Urban Development
Idea & Vision, Plan & programs, Process & Dialogue, Residential, Urban planning
Client: The City of Stockholm
Year of commission: 1997 – 2007, 2013 - 2016
Partners: Several
Developer: The City of Stockholm, Erik Wallin, Stockholmshem, Riksbyggen, Einar Mattsson
Skills/studios: Urban Development, Housing, Helsingborg, among others

Development of the internationally renowned Sustainable City district (Hammarby Sjöstad), one of Stockholm’s largest urban development projects with a strong environmental profile, got under way as early as 1990. We’ve participated on large parts of the project over the years, including work on the in-depth master plan, several zoning plans and many other construction projects.

Sustainable City spans the area around Stockholm’s Hammarby sjö (Lake Hammarby), covering Södra Hammarbyhamnen as well as parts of Södermalm. By 2017, the district will expand to include around 11,000 residences, housing over 25,000 inhabitants. The district forms a natural expansion of Stockholm’s inner city area, something that has influenced its architecture, infrastructure and urban development plan.

Hammarby Sjöstad
Photo: K-A Larsson

The Olympic village dream

From the start, planners envisioned the new district as an Olympic village. The idea was to create a sustainable neighborhood over the worn-down Hammarby harbor and industrial area. This development could have supported Sweden’s bid to host the 2004 Olympic Games. However, events took a different turn. By then, the vision for Hammarby Sjöstad had already taken shape—an environmentally friendly inner-city district offering modern housing for thousands of Stockholmers.

 

From master plan to GlashusEtt

Our involvement in the development of Sustainable City stretches all the way back to 1997. Among other things, we have worked on the in-depth master plan for the entire area and several zoning plans, including documentation, as well as the detailed planning and configuration programme for over 2,400 apartments as well as public spaces, workplaces, amenities and much more.

We’ve also designed GlashusEtt, the City of Stockholm’s first environmental information centre, which has generated a great deal of attention, both in Sweden and globally, since it was opened in 2002. The centre provides information about the Sjöstad environmental programme, among other ventures, with considerable dedication, and has inspired other cities around the world to follow a similar path.

Hammarby Sjöstad
Photo: Björn Lofterud

A transparent building controls and showcases key elements of the area’s environmental technology. In the cellar, it houses an automated vacuum collection tank and a rectifier station for the Tvärbanan link. The building operates through a complex environmental technology system. It uses impulse-controlled heat pumps, ventilators, convectors, and blinds. A biogas boiler, weather station, and solar cell technology are also integrated into the system.

The ultimate objective was to reduce total environmental impact by 50%, in comparison to a typical area constructed at the start of the 1990s.

Photo: K-A Larsson
Photo: K-A Larsson

The Hammarby model

The development of Sustainable City transformed the vision of a sustainable urban district into a detailed environmental program. The ultimate objective was to reduce total environmental impact by 50%, in comparison to a typical area constructed at the start of the 1990s. However, more stringent environmental demands required a completely new set of solutions. This included a closed-loop system – the Hammarby model – with solutions for energy, waste, water and sewerage.

Kasper Salin Prize winner in 2005

In 2005, Hammarby Sjöstad (Sickla Quay, Sickla Canal and Sjöstadsparterren) received the Kasper Salin Prize, one of the finest distinctions in Swedish architecture. This prize also recognised our involvement in the urban development plan for Sickla Quay. Here is an excerpt from the award statement:

”In recognition of an expertly integrated district in a beautiful city space, where urban intensity contrasts with soothing greenery and water. Through a sound balance between content, scale and infrastructure, a human touch has been harnessed in a large, complex context.”

Furthermore, you can read more about Hammarby Sjöstad at the City of Stockholm website.

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

Practice Director Stockholm
+46 8 412 53 43