Integrated planning

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Under Integrated planning refers to the mental development, anticipation, evaluation and implementation of a solution strategy to correct the deficiency. In the real, built and controlled environment, this affects objects and functions that are designed by engineering in the broadest sense, such as transport networks , structures and surfaces. The ability to plan is the essential mental faculty of man; it has contributed significantly to its evolutionary success by enabling it to achieve goals with a minimum of effort.

Integrated planning in the discipline generally known as engineering planning describes the approach to problems in the form of an overall picture. In the past, problems were treated as products, for example traffic was planned without considering the second and third effects. Today it is viewed as a project: the task is always seen as part of the rest of the environment.

This integration is achieved through an interdisciplinary network in which, in addition to the subjects of engineering planning (traffic and urban planning), geography , ecology , economics and, in some cases, the social sciences also make contributions.

Methods of scientific and planning discourse are often used to make the sometimes very complex tasks manageable.

literature

  • Klaus J. Beckmann et al .: Environmentally compatible traffic 2050: Arguments for a mobility strategy for Germany. Dessau 2014: UBA . PDF
  • Steierwald [Hrsg]: Integrated planning - the expert reading book. Aachen 2008: Shaker.
  • Steierwald, Künne, Vogt [Hrsg]: City traffic planning. Berlin 2005: Springer.
  • Carsten Gertz, Axel Stein [Hrsg]: Shaping space and traffic, commemorative publication for Eckhard Kutter . Berlin 2004: Edition Sigma.