Using Counter-Mapping to Promote Resilience in Urban Planning

December 9, 2025

A Central Role for Counter-Mapping with Marginalized Populations to Promote Resilience through Community-Driven Urban Design

Read Article

Abstract

Counter-mapping of community assets and hazards deemed relevant to the effects of climate change and environmental exposures on lowest-income residents. of was a component of a multi-year community-based collaborative study between university researchers, a large Public Housing Agency (PHA) in an urban area in the northeast US, and non-profit community organizations. Researchers recruited community members to participate in four focus groups located in different locations of the City to identify design features that either supported or threatened residents’ resilience as they moved throughout the city. Enlarged street maps were used as reference props to help Participants map local features related to their health, well-being, and comfort in the community. Participants readily identified existing and/or missing features in their neighborhoods and downtown areas and made suggestions for improvements. Counter-mapping is discussed as an important tool for community-driven urban planning and urban design that leverages the preservation of local knowledge and cultural heritage, and challenges the hegemony of design promoted by platform urbanism

Citation

MaryAnn Sorensen Allacci, Jennifer Senick, Victoria Wei et al. A Central Role for Counter-Mapping with Marginalized Populations to Promote Resilience through Community-Driven Urban Design , 17 November 2025, PREPRINT (Version 1) available at Research Square [https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-7747138/v1]

 

 

Recent Posts

NJSPL: Why Do Eligible Workers Still Not Use Paid Family Leave?

New Jersey implemented paid family leave (PFL) in 2009, called the Family Leave Insurance program, and expanded it 10 years later to increase wage replacement rates, lengthen leave duration, and broaden eligibility. In 2026, additional amendments expanded access to...

MCRP Students Envision a More Walkable New Brunswick

Some bold and creative urban planning and design proposals emerged from the Spring 2026 graduate cohort of Graphic Communications, taught by Prof. Carmelo Ignaccolo and Lab Assistant Vivek Dsouza. In this course, Masters in City and Regional Planning students develop...

Bloustein School Announces Faculty Promotions for Smart and Longo

The Bloustein School is pleased to announce the recent promotion of Dr. Michael Smart to Professor and Dr. Nicholas Longo, Director of the Rutgers Democracy Lab, on appointment and tenure as a Professor in the Bloustein School. “I am thrilled to recognize these...