Departure is on Sunday 28/06/2009 at 13:00 from the conference venue, please be there in advance.
University of Economics in Prague / Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze
W. Churchill Sq. 4 / Náměstí W. Churchilla 4
Prague 3 / Praha 3
Czech Republic / Česká republika
Karlín is an old inner city neighbourhood near the city centre and beside the Vltava River. This neighbourhood, which has undergone deindustrialisation and seen the creation of cleaved sites, is now going through rapid regeneration and a dramatic restructuring the urban morphology, land use, and social composition of local inhabitants. The field trip provides insight into the neighbourhood and the main development projects that have been reshaping it since the 1990s.
Suburbanisation is the main process of urban change that is reshaping contemporary post-socialist cities. Residential suburbanisation has developed around Prague since the late 1990s, fuelled by the increasing wealth of Prague´s inhabitants, the availability of restituted land, and support from national and local government housing policies. The field trip presents different types of suburban residential development in a booming area southeast of Prague to illustrate both the dynamics and variability of suburban residential developments and contrast them with old rural settlements.
This field trip focuses on both non-residential and residential development in the Prague outer urban zone, devoting special attention to ribbon development and commercial clusters around highways, spatially concentrated housing, and sprawling landscapes. The main goal is to illustrate the various faces of suburbanisation and discuss new forms peripheral in the context of sustainable metropolitan growth.
Until recently, gated and guarded residential areas have not constituted a prominent type of development in the Czech Republic or the City of Prague. However, as the residential property market has matured, developers have come out with a specific niche form of residential property development that attracts residents interested in and willing to pay a premium to live in an environment of security and peace, obtained through their physical separation from the outside world. The field trip presents examples of gated developments and discusses the major driving forces that led to their development.