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PAULUS (Planning Analysis of Urban Linkages within Urban Systems)
is a web-based information system devoted to documenting the complexity of the decision
making processes in a given planning context.
Actually, a urban planning process produces a huge amount of documents, which are often
archived and may be made available to the public in ways which are difficult to access.
Therefore there is often no readily-available description of when, how and why the corpus
and the documentation of decision areas changed.
The purpose of PAULUS is to supply a web-based tool fitting the need to better describe the
decision system and its evolution in time
Our view of the Urban Planning Process
The urban planning process often involves many actors (aka stakeholders: technical
staff, politicians, land owners, pressure groups, etc.). Each stakeholder has its own
view of how the urban context should change, and definitely there are pressures toward very
different directions. By interacting each other, however, the stakeholders (perhaps with a
technical support by their experts) eventually identify a set of decision areas for
which a choice is needed. A decision area may be regarded as a simple question related to
planning problems. Each problem may have a number of possible solutions (options).
This is half of the story, however, because the "process" is not
synoptic, but instead it
takes place in months, years or, even, it is deferred for future needs. During the process,
the decision areas, options, actors, as well as the supporting documents are not immutable:
they experience changes, often drastic, both in number and extent. Therefore the time axis
is the other half of the story.
In order to pursue our goals, then, we are not simply called to categorize and record the
actors, decision areas, options and documents entering into the urban planning process.
We need also to trace how, when and why these objects evolve in time. We regard this as
a main requirement to attain decision
traceability:
to us, an information system on the urban decision process must implement techniques to
track a decision down the time axis.
Breaking the Continuum
Since time is (supposed to be) a
continuum, there are
no easy nor unique way to document such a dimension, according our view of the urban
planning process. We opted to
discretize it
by assuming that we are only interested in the events triggering "public" changes
to the corpus of the decision areas, options, actors and documents. We use a broad
meaning of "event": it may, for example, be the outcome of a meeting among some of the
actors, a new law issued, or a new actor entering into the process.
Technical details
The project is developed as a
Java Enterprise Application using the
Java ServerFaces (JSF),
Facelets,
Hibernate, and
JBoss-seam technologies. It runs on a
JBoss Application Server (AS) and adopts
PostgreSQL as its database engine.
It is distributed under the
GNU General Public License
Colophon
This project stems from a study of
Paolo Scattoni
from the DiPTU
(Dipartimento interateneo per la Pianificazione Territoriale ed Urbana),
"La Sapienza" University in Rome, Italy.
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