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Research on the Coupled Development Model of Historic Buildings and Urban Renewal Based on Collaborative Governance

Lin Tuo ()
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Lin Tuo: Soochow University, Gold Mantis School of Architecture

A chapter in Proceedings of the 2026 3rd International Conference on Applied Economics, Management Science and Social Development (AEMSS 2026), 2026, pp 288-295 from Springer

Abstract: Abstract Amid China’s urbanization shift from incremental expansion to stock optimization, the contradiction between historic building protection and urban functional upgrading has grown increasingly prominent, and the traditional one-way management model struggles to resolve complex interest conflicts, leading to fragmented protection and homogenized renewal projects. This study first conducts a bibliometric visual analysis of global relevant literature from 2002 to 2025 based on the Web of Science Core Collection, finding an exponential growth in publications in this field (dominated by engineering and technology) yet a lack of systematic research on multi-agent collaborative governance mechanisms. In response, it introduces synergetics and collaborative governance theories to construct a four-dimensional coupled development model of “subject-space-function-mechanism”, proposes a pluralistic co-governance paradigm of “government guidance, market operation, public participation, professional support”, and designs implementation paths of “development benefit feedback” and “HBIM full-life-cycle empowerment”. Empirical analyses of Suzhou Pingjiang Road and Beijing 798 Art District verify the model’s effectiveness in balancing cultural inheritance with economic and social benefits, providing a theoretical framework and practical guidance for high-quality urban development in the stock era.

Keywords: Historic Buildings; Urban Renewal; Collaborative Governance (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:spr:advbcp:978-94-6239-672-2_27

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DOI: 10.2991/978-94-6239-672-2_27

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