Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg case

The design crisis, specifically in the drawing of urban planning, coincided with Port cities’ experiences of dismissing of historical and modern port due to changes in capitalist production models and, since ‘80s, have been facing the challenge of waterfront regeneration. Several earliest generation...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Federica Vingelli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MASTER PRO Ingegneri Associati 2018-11-01
Series:UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/6105
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spelling doaj-bb97f60a27c44d9d81eb315416efb96f2021-01-26T08:31:30ZengMASTER PRO Ingegneri AssociatiUPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design2531-99062018-11-01329311210.6092/2531-9906/61056105Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg caseFederica Vingelli0Department of Architecture, University of Naples, Federico IIThe design crisis, specifically in the drawing of urban planning, coincided with Port cities’ experiences of dismissing of historical and modern port due to changes in capitalist production models and, since ‘80s, have been facing the challenge of waterfront regeneration. Several earliest generations port regenerations have in turn landed in new places of tourist and cultural specialization while the challenge of the third generation plans deals with regional issues and is now called upon to consider, in addition to disused constructions and infrastructure, citizens’ and operators’ local interest along with global challenges of economy and climate change. Within a process of more than 30 years redevelopment plans tend to abandon the project-led and short-term approach in order to integrate waterfront redesign in a city and regional perspective. The port cities and their transformations are observed through the changing relationship between the two components of the city-port: evolutionary models underlines common features of port wasted areas while the Hamburg case describes the evolution of urban and territorial planning processes from a project-oriented approach to an adaptive and territorial vision making strategic, shared and long term planning the institutional framework and planning in which to rethink contemporary port city development and regeneration complex actions.http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/6105Contemporary port citiesPlanning evolutionWasted landsWaterfront regenerationWaterfront management
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Federica Vingelli
spellingShingle Federica Vingelli
Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg case
UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
Contemporary port cities
Planning evolution
Wasted lands
Waterfront regeneration
Waterfront management
author_facet Federica Vingelli
author_sort Federica Vingelli
title Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg case
title_short Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg case
title_full Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg case
title_fullStr Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg case
title_full_unstemmed Generations of waterfront regenerations: the Hamburg case
title_sort generations of waterfront regenerations: the hamburg case
publisher MASTER PRO Ingegneri Associati
series UPLanD: Journal of Urban Planning, Landscape & Environmental Design
issn 2531-9906
publishDate 2018-11-01
description The design crisis, specifically in the drawing of urban planning, coincided with Port cities’ experiences of dismissing of historical and modern port due to changes in capitalist production models and, since ‘80s, have been facing the challenge of waterfront regeneration. Several earliest generations port regenerations have in turn landed in new places of tourist and cultural specialization while the challenge of the third generation plans deals with regional issues and is now called upon to consider, in addition to disused constructions and infrastructure, citizens’ and operators’ local interest along with global challenges of economy and climate change. Within a process of more than 30 years redevelopment plans tend to abandon the project-led and short-term approach in order to integrate waterfront redesign in a city and regional perspective. The port cities and their transformations are observed through the changing relationship between the two components of the city-port: evolutionary models underlines common features of port wasted areas while the Hamburg case describes the evolution of urban and territorial planning processes from a project-oriented approach to an adaptive and territorial vision making strategic, shared and long term planning the institutional framework and planning in which to rethink contemporary port city development and regeneration complex actions.
topic Contemporary port cities
Planning evolution
Wasted lands
Waterfront regeneration
Waterfront management
url http://www.serena.unina.it/index.php/upland/article/view/6105
work_keys_str_mv AT federicavingelli generationsofwaterfrontregenerationsthehamburgcase
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