TY - GEN AU - Arcidiacono,Andrea AU - Salvia,Giuseppe AU - Morello,Eugenio TI - Sharing Cities Shaping Cities SN - books978-3-03897-989-0 PY - 2019/// PB - MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute KW - Airbnb and policy innovation KW - n/a KW - accessibility KW - Airbnb and housing typologies KW - informality KW - Melbourne sharing economy KW - bike sharing KW - local communities KW - Airbnb and planning KW - Airbnb and domestic design KW - mobility policy KW - platform cooperativism KW - urban regeneration KW - Airbnb and governance KW - emotions KW - democratic quality KW - sharing KW - urban studies KW - stress levels KW - sharing platform KW - digital participation KW - social relations KW - spatial agency KW - critical autoethnography KW - cohousing KW - collaborative workplaces KW - participation KW - Bourdieu KW - co-design KW - coworking KW - entrepreneurial action KW - coworking spaces KW - Melbourne Airbnb KW - coworking business KW - collaborative economy KW - design-research KW - sustainable mobility KW - urban mobility KW - architecture KW - architectural and urban effects of Airbnb KW - ageing KW - physiological sensors KW - GSR KW - sharing economic KW - social street KW - matchmaking KW - socio-spatial effects of Airbnb KW - sharing economy KW - urban KW - galvanic skin response KW - coproduction KW - coworking space KW - emotional layer N1 - Open Access N2 - The sharing economy and collaborative consumption are attracting a great deal of interest due to their business, legal and civic implications. The consequences of the spreading of practices of sharing in urban environments and under daily dynamics are underexplored. This Special Issue aims to address if and how sharing shapes cities, the way that spaces are designed and lived in if social interactions are escalated, and the ways that habits and routines take place in post-individualistic society. In particular, the following key questions are of primary interest: Urban fabric: How is ‘sharing’ shaping cities? Does it represent a paradigm shift with tangible and physical reverberations on urban form? How are shared mobility, work, inhabiting reconfiguring the urban and social fabric? Social practices: Are new lifestyles and practices related to sharing changing the use and design of spaces? To what extent is sharing triggering a production and consumption paradigm shift to be reflected in urban arrangements and infrastructures? Sustainability: Does sharing increase the intensity of use of space and assets, or, rather, does it increase them to meet the expectations of convenience for urban lifestyles? To what extent are these phenomena fostering more economically-, socially-, and environmentally-sustainable practices and cities? Policy: How can policy makers and municipalities interact with these bottom-up and phenomena and grassroots innovation to create more sustainable cities? Scholars responded to the above questions from the fields of urban studies, urban planning and design, sociology, geography, theoretically-grounded and informed by the results of fieldwork activities UR - https://mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/1323 UR - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/59315 ER -