Abstract From reading the policy documents of the various public bodies responsible for spatial planning (or town and country or regional planning), such as the EC documents Europe 2000 or Europe 2000+, the European Spatial Development Perspective (ESDP), or the German European Metropolitan Areas in Germany, it becomes clear that metropolitan areas or city regions are at the spatial forefront of development perspectives. Here, as is well known, the most pressing features of contemporary societies can be seen at the surface, but here too, these negative developments are paired with the hopes and glories of coming societies. In other words, European Metropoles become the engines of change! A research project on cities in North Rhine–Westphalia, the largest region in Germany, highlights the context and future expectations for spatial development processes. As the title indicates, given the complex framework shaping spatial development on the one side, and the complex actor structures and expectations on the other, a strategic approach based on vision and creativity is needed in order to turn our city regions into agents of change. The core elements to achieve this are communication, learning, creative projects and new governance models.
[1]
R. Heinze,et al.
Regionalisierung der Strukturpolitik in Nordrhein-Westfalen
,
1997
.
[2]
Adam Tickell,et al.
Business Goes Local: Dissecting the ‘Business Agenda’ in Manchester*
,
1995
.
[3]
B. Jessop.
Towards a Schumpeterian Workfare Regime in Britain? Reflections on Regulation, Governance, and Welfare State
,
1995
.
[4]
M. Castells,et al.
The Informational City. Information Technology, Economic Restructuring, and the Urban-Regional Process
,
1995
.
[5]
Simon Marvin,et al.
Telecommunications and the City: Electronic Spaces, Urban Places
,
1996
.
[6]
Joe Painter,et al.
Local Governance, the Crises of Fordism and the Changing Geographies of Regulation
,
1996
.
[7]
R. Florida.
Toward the Learning Region
,
1995
.