ESA SAINT-LUC LIEGE BIBLIOTHEQUE
ACCES COMPTE LECTEUR :
à la demande via l'adresse mail de la bibliothèque.
Catégories
Ajouter le résultat dans votre panier Affiner la recherche Interroger des sources externes
9.2020 - 2020-09-09 - Konzept = Concept : Wohnquartiere = Residential Areas (Bulletin de Detail : Zeitschrift für Architecktur + Baudetail)
[n° ou bulletin]
Titre : 9.2020 - 2020-09-09 - Konzept = Concept : Wohnquartiere = Residential Areas Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2020 Langues : Allemand (ger) Anglais (eng) Catégories : Architecture -- Dessins et plans
Construction en béton -- 21e siècle
Densification urbaine
Habitations -- Aspect environnemental
Immeubles de grande hauteur -- Dessins et plans
Politique du logement -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- Bâle (Suisse) -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- Munich (Allemagne) -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- Tōkyō (Japon) -- 21e siècle
Urbanisme -- 21e siècle -- Aspect économique
Urbanisme -- 21e siècle -- Aspect social
Urbanisme -- Dessins et plansIndex. décimale : 72 Architecture Note de contenu : DETAIL 9/2020
published 01.09.2020
Money talks – this sober principle still dominates the planning of residential areas today. Many municipalities find it difficult to resist investor-driven urban development. But local residents have become more demanding. It’s is a well-known fact that a lively urban quarter needs more than just affordable housing, ample parking spaces and a functioning traffic infrastructure. Yet it is much more difficult to translate this insight into actual planning.
Andreas Hofer, Director of the International BuildingExhibition 2027 in Stuttgart and co-initiator of several housing cooperatives in Zurich, has a lot of experience in doing so. In his essay, he describes the laborious farewell to 100 years of housing developments and the renaissance of the urban quarter – “this dense and loud mess hated by modernity”. For him, this paradigm shift is best achieved where there are links to existing building structures, for example in former industrial areas.
In this issue, we take an in-depth look at two current neighbourhood developments. Prinz Eugen Park in Munich and Erlenmatt Ost in Basel are pursuing ambitious goals in terms of resource conservation, mixed use and social integration. The guidelines on which their planning is based are accordingly detailed. Of equal importance are clients who are open to experimentation and intensive cooperation between all stakeholders during the planning process and beyond.
We also take a look beyond Europe’s borders. In the Reports section of this issue, Florian Busch describes the forces at work behind the apparent chaos of Tokyo’s urban planning and the challenges facing Japan’s capital city with its pending population decline.En ligne : https://www.detail.de/heft-artikel/konzept-wohnquartiere/ [n° ou bulletin] 9.2020 - 2020-09-09 - Konzept = Concept : Wohnquartiere = Residential Areas [texte imprimé] . - 2020.
Langues : Allemand (ger) Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Architecture -- Dessins et plans
Construction en béton -- 21e siècle
Densification urbaine
Habitations -- Aspect environnemental
Immeubles de grande hauteur -- Dessins et plans
Politique du logement -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- Bâle (Suisse) -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- Munich (Allemagne) -- 21e siècle
Quartiers (urbanisme) -- Tōkyō (Japon) -- 21e siècle
Urbanisme -- 21e siècle -- Aspect économique
Urbanisme -- 21e siècle -- Aspect social
Urbanisme -- Dessins et plansIndex. décimale : 72 Architecture Note de contenu : DETAIL 9/2020
published 01.09.2020
Money talks – this sober principle still dominates the planning of residential areas today. Many municipalities find it difficult to resist investor-driven urban development. But local residents have become more demanding. It’s is a well-known fact that a lively urban quarter needs more than just affordable housing, ample parking spaces and a functioning traffic infrastructure. Yet it is much more difficult to translate this insight into actual planning.
Andreas Hofer, Director of the International BuildingExhibition 2027 in Stuttgart and co-initiator of several housing cooperatives in Zurich, has a lot of experience in doing so. In his essay, he describes the laborious farewell to 100 years of housing developments and the renaissance of the urban quarter – “this dense and loud mess hated by modernity”. For him, this paradigm shift is best achieved where there are links to existing building structures, for example in former industrial areas.
In this issue, we take an in-depth look at two current neighbourhood developments. Prinz Eugen Park in Munich and Erlenmatt Ost in Basel are pursuing ambitious goals in terms of resource conservation, mixed use and social integration. The guidelines on which their planning is based are accordingly detailed. Of equal importance are clients who are open to experimentation and intensive cooperation between all stakeholders during the planning process and beyond.
We also take a look beyond Europe’s borders. In the Reports section of this issue, Florian Busch describes the forces at work behind the apparent chaos of Tokyo’s urban planning and the challenges facing Japan’s capital city with its pending population decline.En ligne : https://www.detail.de/heft-artikel/konzept-wohnquartiere/ Réservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 24684 DETAIL Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible Le Corbusier
Titre : Le Corbusier Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Willy Boesiger, Editeur scientifique ; Heinrich Robert von der Mühll, Traducteur Editeur : Zurich : Artemis Année de publication : cop. 1972 Collection : Studiopaperback num. 2 Importance : 257 p. Présentation : ill. en noir et blanc Format : 20 cm ISBN/ISSN/EAN : 978-3-7608-8101-0 Note générale : Texte allemand avec traduction française en regard
Liste des œuvres de Le Corbusier, p. 248-250Langues : Allemand (ger) Français (fre) Catégories : Architecture -- Dessins et plans
Le Corbusier (1887-1965)
Urbanisme -- Dessins et plansIndex. décimale : 747(092)+72(092) Architectes d'intérieur et architectes Résumé :
Dès 1960, Le Corbusier manifestait le désir que ses œuvres fussent publiées dans une édition à bon marché.
"Il faut songer aux jeunes qui n'ont pas les moyens d'acheter des livres chers, et c'est justement à eux que je m'adresse ...".
Les ensembles montrés ici sont des réalisations pour l'habitation individuelle et pour l'habitation collective, des édifices publics et religieux, ainsi que des plans d'urbanisme.Le Corbusier [texte imprimé] / Willy Boesiger, Editeur scientifique ; Heinrich Robert von der Mühll, Traducteur . - Zurich : Artemis, cop. 1972 . - 257 p. : ill. en noir et blanc ; 20 cm. - (Studiopaperback; 2) .
ISBN : 978-3-7608-8101-0
Texte allemand avec traduction française en regard
Liste des œuvres de Le Corbusier, p. 248-250
Langues : Allemand (ger) Français (fre)
Catégories : Architecture -- Dessins et plans
Le Corbusier (1887-1965)
Urbanisme -- Dessins et plansIndex. décimale : 747(092)+72(092) Architectes d'intérieur et architectes Résumé :
Dès 1960, Le Corbusier manifestait le désir que ses œuvres fussent publiées dans une édition à bon marché.
"Il faut songer aux jeunes qui n'ont pas les moyens d'acheter des livres chers, et c'est justement à eux que je m'adresse ...".
Les ensembles montrés ici sont des réalisations pour l'habitation individuelle et pour l'habitation collective, des édifices publics et religieux, ainsi que des plans d'urbanisme.Réservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité Sl 05446 747+7.05(092) LE CORBUSIER Livre ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible Vol.2018:N°7/8 - 2018-07-01 - Urbane Räume = Urabn Spaces (Bulletin de Detail : Zeitschrift für Architecktur + Baudetail)
[n° ou bulletin]
Titre : Vol.2018:N°7/8 - 2018-07-01 - Urbane Räume = Urabn Spaces Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2018 Langues : Allemand (ger) Anglais (eng) Catégories : Architecture -- Dessins et plans
Constructions universitaires -- Londres (GB)
Design urbain
Eaux pluviales
Équipements sportifs
Espaces publics
Fondations (construction)
Gehl, Jan (1936-....)
Gestion des ressources en eau -- Aspect environnemental
Jeux d'extérieur
Marchés -- Anderlecht (Belgique)
Monuments commémoratifs de la Shoah -- Bologne (Italie)
Murs végétalisés
Passerelles -- Conception et construction -- Bruxelles (Belgique)
Sugimoto, Hiroshi (1948-....)
Terrains de jeux -- Conception et construction
Urbanisme -- Aspect de l'environnement
Urbanisme -- Aspect social
Urbanisme -- Dessins et plans
Urbanisme -- PhilosophieIndex. décimale : 72 Architecture Résumé :
What factors contribute to the success of urban spaces? The Danish architect and urban planner Jan Gehl posed this question back in the 1960s when he first investigated the behaviour of people on the streets and squares of our cities. In his book “Life Between Buildings” (1971) Gehl distinguishes three types of outdoor activities: necessary, optional and social. His thesis is that the more a public space has to offer its users for spontaneous activities and unplanned leisure, the more social life will develop there.
In our current issue, we examine urban spaces that possess these qualities. The documentations illustrate the variety in which we encounter such spaces today: as a market hall, playground and community centre, pedestrian bridge and an inner courtyard on a university campus. We find urban spaces not only between houses, but also in, at and on buildings as well as along traffic roads. Many of these places are not only for unspecific pastimes, but have a clearly defined function and are based on a well-conceived spatial programme. Interdisciplinary planning is usually indispensable for their success.
A nice example is the playground and exercise area on the roof of a car park in Copenhagen, for which Jaja Architects collaborated with two recreational facility design firms. Along the same lines, our essay examines how the fitness trend is increasingly conquering urban space, leading to ever-new design approaches and functional overlaps.
Of course, there is a fine line between that and overdesign or functional overload. Cities also need areas that simply offer space for contemplation, such as the Shoah Memorial in Bologna by SET Architects, which we also document in the current issue.
Harald Sommer takes us underground in his article for our technology section. Explaining modern strategies of urban rainwater management, he shows how these can be integrated into compelling open space design. After all, urban spaces not only need quality of life but also a future-proof infrastructure in times of climate change.En ligne : https://www.detail-online.com/magazine/urban-spaces-32480/ [n° ou bulletin] Vol.2018:N°7/8 - 2018-07-01 - Urbane Räume = Urabn Spaces [texte imprimé] . - 2018.
Langues : Allemand (ger) Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Architecture -- Dessins et plans
Constructions universitaires -- Londres (GB)
Design urbain
Eaux pluviales
Équipements sportifs
Espaces publics
Fondations (construction)
Gehl, Jan (1936-....)
Gestion des ressources en eau -- Aspect environnemental
Jeux d'extérieur
Marchés -- Anderlecht (Belgique)
Monuments commémoratifs de la Shoah -- Bologne (Italie)
Murs végétalisés
Passerelles -- Conception et construction -- Bruxelles (Belgique)
Sugimoto, Hiroshi (1948-....)
Terrains de jeux -- Conception et construction
Urbanisme -- Aspect de l'environnement
Urbanisme -- Aspect social
Urbanisme -- Dessins et plans
Urbanisme -- PhilosophieIndex. décimale : 72 Architecture Résumé :
What factors contribute to the success of urban spaces? The Danish architect and urban planner Jan Gehl posed this question back in the 1960s when he first investigated the behaviour of people on the streets and squares of our cities. In his book “Life Between Buildings” (1971) Gehl distinguishes three types of outdoor activities: necessary, optional and social. His thesis is that the more a public space has to offer its users for spontaneous activities and unplanned leisure, the more social life will develop there.
In our current issue, we examine urban spaces that possess these qualities. The documentations illustrate the variety in which we encounter such spaces today: as a market hall, playground and community centre, pedestrian bridge and an inner courtyard on a university campus. We find urban spaces not only between houses, but also in, at and on buildings as well as along traffic roads. Many of these places are not only for unspecific pastimes, but have a clearly defined function and are based on a well-conceived spatial programme. Interdisciplinary planning is usually indispensable for their success.
A nice example is the playground and exercise area on the roof of a car park in Copenhagen, for which Jaja Architects collaborated with two recreational facility design firms. Along the same lines, our essay examines how the fitness trend is increasingly conquering urban space, leading to ever-new design approaches and functional overlaps.
Of course, there is a fine line between that and overdesign or functional overload. Cities also need areas that simply offer space for contemplation, such as the Shoah Memorial in Bologna by SET Architects, which we also document in the current issue.
Harald Sommer takes us underground in his article for our technology section. Explaining modern strategies of urban rainwater management, he shows how these can be integrated into compelling open space design. After all, urban spaces not only need quality of life but also a future-proof infrastructure in times of climate change.En ligne : https://www.detail-online.com/magazine/urban-spaces-32480/ Réservation
Réserver ce document
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 22703 DETAIL Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible