All rights reservedVerbeek, ThomasLeinfelder, HansPisman, AnnHanegreefs, GrietAllaert, Georges2024-04-042024-04-042010978-80-01-05782-7https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14235/1521Book of proceedings: Annual AESOP Congress, 2010 Space is Luxury, Aalto, July 7-10thThe boundary between the Flemish urban and rural areas has faded in recent years and a fragmented spatial structure has emerged. The ‘open space’ is evolving from an agricultural production area to a semi-urbanized consumption area. On the one hand the public use of open space seems to be growing, particularly because of the success of recreational networks. On the other hand the open space also seems to be increasingly used in a private way, as a consequence of residential development, setting up gardens and hobby farming. An empirical case study showed that these evolutions are actual phenomena and that some determining conditions can be defined. Both evolutions tend to change the open space profoundly. Planning policy should be aiming to guide these evolutions in the best way possible, considering the limited carrying-capacity of open space. Maybe the control of accessibility of the countryside is part of the solution.EnglishopenAccessopen spaceprivatizationrecreationPublic and private use of open space in a densely urbanized contextconferenceObject271-287