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urbanRESET. How to Activate Immanent Potentials of Urban Spaces | Angelus Eisinger, Nina Brodowski, Jorg Seifert | 9783034607766

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urbanRESET

How to Activate Immanent Potentials of Urban Spaces - Freilegen immanenter Potenziale städtischer Räume

Author:Angelus Eisinger, Nina Brodowski, Jorg Seifert

Publisher:Birkhäuser

ISBN: 978-3-0346-0776-6

  • Paperback
  • English, German
  • 272 Pages
  • Jan 24, 2012

Dealing with the architectural legacy of the industrial age is an increasingly common task for urban planning. The book 'urbanRESET. How to Activate Immanent Potentials of Urban Spaces' brings together examples of this separate category of urban-planning from throughout Europe. It features theoretical essays showing how local processes of reinterpretation and reactivation can produce sustainable effects.

urbanRESET deals with the topics of building tomorrow's city by reinterpreting existing urban spaces. In recent years and decades, dealing with the architectural legacy of the industrial age has been an increasingly common task for urban planning: industrial buildings and sites, infrastructure, and residential areas that have become vacant lots as a result of structural transformation cannot, if only because of their dimensions, be ignored within the urban space. Innovative reinterpretations of such relics that update existing building fabric in a way that goes beyond critical reconstruction or revitalization, such as the Toni Site in Zurich or the Ile de Nantes, can be observed throughout Europe these days.

Dealing with the architectural legacy of the industrial age is an increasingly common task for urban planning. The book 'urbanRESET. How to Activate Immanent Potentials of Urban Spaces' brings together examples of this separate category of urban-planning from throughout Europe. It features theoretical essays showing how local processes of reinterpretation and reactivation can produce sustainable effects.

urbanRESET deals with the topics of building tomorrow's city by reinterpreting existing urban spaces. In recent years and decades, dealing with the architectural legacy of the industrial age has been an increasingly common task for urban planning: industrial buildings and sites, infrastructure, and residential areas that have become vacant lots as a result of structural transformation cannot, if only because of their dimensions, be ignored within the urban space. Innovative reinterpretations of such relics that update existing building fabric in a way that goes beyond critical reconstruction or revitalization, such as the Toni Site in Zurich or the Ile de Nantes, can be observed throughout Europe these days.

The publication "UrbanRESET" brings together succinct examples of this separate category of urban-planning from throughout Europe. The projects are presented in detail with plans and color illustrations. Interviews with key players and theoretical essays show how local processes of reinterpretation and reactivation can produce sustainable effects. "UrbanRESET" sheds light on the common foundations of these works and condenses them into methodological inferences for a forward-looking urban praxis.

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