About: Prague Housing Estates and EMU workshop     Goto   Sponge   NotDistinct   Permalink

An Entity of Type : http://linked.opendata.cz/ontology/domain/vavai/Vysledek, within Data Space : linked.opendata.cz associated with source document(s)

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:seeAlso
Description
  • East European housing estates represent an unique experience: they are usually much bigger than those, erected in Western Europe + they were built even at times when their shortcomings became already clear elsewhere in the world. In many East European countries including Czech republic, efforts to redevelop and regenerate these areas were effectively blocked by the property changes which took place during early 90-ties when most of these formerly municipal or corporately owned schemes were privatized into the hands of individual flat owners. On top of all this Czech housing estates unlike their West European counterparts show an interesting mixture of scoring poorly when evaluated by the general public but relatively high when judged by those who actually live in them. Public debate about the issue is now blocked between politicians, professionals and inhabitants, which inhibits correct reading of the situation, prediction of future development and gathering enough support and funding to take any renewal action. It was the ambition of the workshop to demonstrate such complex social/cultural/planning phenomena to foreign students and to gather their insight on the issue. The workshop brought up several interesting issues: - Housing estates regeneration proves to be difficult task where the remedy often stays out of architect's reach - lying primarily within the range of local politics. - Poor spatial legibility of the housing estate's public spaces has a negative impact on the activities usually associated with public space: running from commercial to social. - Low level of expectancy makes the panel block houses a relatively desirable place to, but offers little ground for social diversity of the environment. - Clear affinity between the housing project throughout the whole %22eastern bloc%22 countries: students from these countries were able to relate to these large scale sites in a more direct way then their colleagues from Western Europe or Latin America.
  • East European housing estates represent an unique experience: they are usually much bigger than those, erected in Western Europe + they were built even at times when their shortcomings became already clear elsewhere in the world. In many East European countries including Czech republic, efforts to redevelop and regenerate these areas were effectively blocked by the property changes which took place during early 90-ties when most of these formerly municipal or corporately owned schemes were privatized into the hands of individual flat owners. On top of all this Czech housing estates unlike their West European counterparts show an interesting mixture of scoring poorly when evaluated by the general public but relatively high when judged by those who actually live in them. Public debate about the issue is now blocked between politicians, professionals and inhabitants, which inhibits correct reading of the situation, prediction of future development and gathering enough support and funding to take any renewal action. It was the ambition of the workshop to demonstrate such complex social/cultural/planning phenomena to foreign students and to gather their insight on the issue. The workshop brought up several interesting issues: - Housing estates regeneration proves to be difficult task where the remedy often stays out of architect's reach - lying primarily within the range of local politics. - Poor spatial legibility of the housing estate's public spaces has a negative impact on the activities usually associated with public space: running from commercial to social. - Low level of expectancy makes the panel block houses a relatively desirable place to, but offers little ground for social diversity of the environment. - Clear affinity between the housing project throughout the whole %22eastern bloc%22 countries: students from these countries were able to relate to these large scale sites in a more direct way then their colleagues from Western Europe or Latin America. (en)
Title
  • Prague Housing Estates and EMU workshop
  • Prague Housing Estates and EMU workshop (en)
skos:prefLabel
  • Prague Housing Estates and EMU workshop
  • Prague Housing Estates and EMU workshop (en)
skos:notation
  • RIV/68407700:21450/11:00202997!RIV13-MSM-21450___
http://linked.open...avai/predkladatel
http://linked.open...avai/riv/aktivita
http://linked.open...avai/riv/aktivity
  • V
http://linked.open...vai/riv/dodaniDat
http://linked.open...aciTvurceVysledku
http://linked.open.../riv/druhVysledku
http://linked.open...iv/duvernostUdaju
http://linked.open...titaPredkladatele
http://linked.open...dnocenehoVysledku
  • 222436
http://linked.open...ai/riv/idVysledku
  • RIV/68407700:21450/11:00202997
http://linked.open...riv/jazykVysledku
http://linked.open.../riv/klicovaSlova
  • housing estates; built environment; panel-slab technology; urban regeneration; spatial legibility; public space; social adaptability (en)
http://linked.open.../riv/klicoveSlovo
http://linked.open...ontrolniKodProRIV
  • [FF07AAA69673]
http://linked.open...v/mistoKonaniAkce
  • Praha
http://linked.open...i/riv/mistoVydani
  • Praha
http://linked.open...i/riv/nazevZdroje
  • Emu in prague 2011, New towns of Prague - revitalisation of prague housing estates
http://linked.open...in/vavai/riv/obor
http://linked.open...ichTvurcuVysledku
http://linked.open...cetTvurcuVysledku
http://linked.open...UplatneniVysledku
http://linked.open...iv/tvurceVysledku
  • Kohout, Michal
http://linked.open...vavai/riv/typAkce
http://linked.open.../riv/zahajeniAkce
number of pages
http://purl.org/ne...btex#hasPublisher
  • Zlatý řez
https://schema.org/isbn
  • 978-80-87068-08-3
http://localhost/t...ganizacniJednotka
  • 21450
is http://linked.open...avai/riv/vysledek of
Faceted Search & Find service v1.16.118 as of Jun 21 2024


Alternative Linked Data Documents: ODE     Content Formats:   [cxml] [csv]     RDF   [text] [turtle] [ld+json] [rdf+json] [rdf+xml]     ODATA   [atom+xml] [odata+json]     Microdata   [microdata+json] [html]    About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data] Valid XHTML + RDFa
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3240 as of Jun 21 2024, on Linux (x86_64-pc-linux-gnu), Single-Server Edition (126 GB total memory, 58 GB memory in use)
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2024 OpenLink Software