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A Collaborative Geodesign Approach for Integrating Local and Technical Knowledge in Establishing Land-Use Planning for the Border Town Comprehensive Plan |
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| รหัสดีโอไอ | |
| Creator | Suppawad Kaewkhow |
| Title | A Collaborative Geodesign Approach for Integrating Local and Technical Knowledge in Establishing Land-Use Planning for the Border Town Comprehensive Plan |
| Contributor | Manat Srivanit |
| Publisher | Thammasat Printing House |
| Publication Year | 2560 |
| Journal Title | International Journal of Building, Urban, Interior and Landscape Technology |
| Journal Vol. | 10 |
| Page no. | 43-54 |
| Keyword | Planning Support System (PSS), Geodesign, Spatial indicators, Land-Use planning, Border town |
| URL Website | http://www.builtjournal.org/about.html |
| Website title | BUILT Journal |
| ISSN | 2228-9194 |
| Abstract | This article presents an original approach to comprehensive planning for supportingdecision-making processes in the land-use planning of border town which integrates aset of frameworks and methodologies into technologies based on the use of geospatialinformation. The technologies embrace the domain of planning support systems, whoseurban planner is based on the Geodesign framework. The purpose of this study was todevelop a practical framework for Geodesign process to support the spatial planningprocess in practice. In this paper, a land-use suitability analysis (LUSA) method is proposedand demonstrated for the location requirements of the development and use of land.The study uses the Ban Lak Taeng Border Checkpoint Comprehensive Planning Project(a border checkpoint between Thailand and Myanmar to promoting cross-border tradeand tourism, which is located in Wiang Haeng District, Chiang Mai Province, Thailand), asthe research context for examining the ways that Geodesign was promoted the practicalapplication. This Geodesign enhanced collaborative planning processes, built knowledge ofnatural and production systems at the urban landscape scale, and integrated considerationof feedback from multiple performance criteria into an adaptive and iterative process ofland-use planning and design. The study describes the development and application ofthe Geodesign system used in the land-use planning process and offers important insightsinto how the system contributed to the collaborative stakeholder engagement, informedstakeholder decision making, and enhanced the comprehensive plan outcomes. |