| editorial
The LUDA e-newsletter is a free
electronic document, edited by the LUDA research team from the Leibniz
Institute of Ecological and Regional Development in Dresden (Germany).
The e-newsletter is distributed every three months, providing project
updates, information on current affairs and details of other
interesting issues.
Florence completes in this newsletter the presentation of the cases in
the Partner Cities. The city of Florence has initiated the
establishment of the Urban Regeneration Group within EUROCITIES
network, where discussions started in the LUDA project will be
continued and the project results will be disseminated among the member
cities.
In her essay Ms Kerstin Manz introduces another institution, which is
also working on the urban development - UNESCO World Heritage
Convention. Kerstin presents two important documents: the Vienna
Memorandum and the Declaration on the Conservation of Historic Urban
Landscapes, which can be used as tools to address problems in
sustainable urban management. Both serve can help in searching for
solutions through dialogue and participatory work. The whole text of
the Vienna Memorandum is attached to the essay in this newsletter.
We wish you a nice lecture!
The IOER LUDA Team
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highlights
LUDA Conference in Paris: Governance and Sustainable
Development: a key factor in the improvement of the quality of life in
large urban distressed areas, 16th September 2005
Governance encompasses the key aspects
of inclusion and consultation that can provide a potential platform for
the interaction between all stakeholders, including public and private
sector agencies, municipal authorities, business and inhabitants to
contribute to improving the quality of life. This strategic process
needs the commitment and participation of different stakeholders, to
create efficient and effective solutions and influence any resultant
actions and policies. The LUDA conference aimed at discussing the
dimensions and parameters of improving the quality of life in large
urban distressed areas and how the concept of governance and governance
led strategies can influence policies and be the catalyst of change.
The invited speakers like Patrick Braouzec (Chairman of "Plaine
Commune"), Olivier Mandon (IAURIF/ URBACT), Liliana Padovani
(University of Venice), Kerstin Manz (UNESCO Europe Division), Enzo
Mingione (University of Milano-Biccoca), Laurent Davezies (Institut
d'Urbanisme de Paris), Jacques Magny (Caisse des Dépôts et
Consignations), Thierry Vilmin (Logiville), Huchet du Guermeur (Nantes
Métropole) given inputs to the discussion, in which following
points were highlighted:
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The role
of political power and institutional organisation, the role of
knowledge and tools, the role of international structures in urban
regeneration of distressed areas.
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Complexity of issues to deal with
in urban regeneration. This high complexity goes with high uncertainty,
increasing the need to regularly review tools, policies and knowledge.
Therefore, independent monitoring is important, questioning not only
political decisions, but also choice, use, availability and reliability
of data.
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Planning power of the urban
regeneration companies (URC). This topic is closely linked to the
quality issues. In France, these URC don't have planning power, but may
participate in planning strategies. The private investors in the
distressed areas foster regeneration dynamics.
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The importance to find a balance
between investment in economic activities, housing, schools, public
facilities and services for the success of urban regeneration of urban
distressed areas.
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With
regard to urban public strategies, discussion showed that often they
are not pre-existing but are built during the regeneration process, in
a bottom-up movement, starting from a few projects and actions.
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Workshop in Dresden: Identity and Change in Weisseritz
area
In Dresden a series of workshops organised by the
Leibniz Institute for Ecological Development (IOER), the Planning
Department of city of Dresden and the Bureau for Environmental Planning
and City Development (BUS).with the stakeholders in the LUDA area
has been started. After the fist workshop in June 2005 (newsletter
10 reported about), the stakeholders created a regular table to
arise their knowledge about the area, discuss more intensively their
involvement in the redevelopment process and to develop common projects.
The second stockholder's workshop took place on the 13th October
2005. Discussed were approaches and instruments for the promotion
of the economy with special consideration of the small and middle
sized enterprises. Invited were external experts from the cities
of Dortmund, Köln und Kassel. The aims of the workshop were:
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Exchange
of the already done experiences in both ERDF founded projects in
Dresden with regard to the promotion of the economy and employment
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Exchange of experiences with
other cities
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Discussion about the role of the
economy promotion in the revitalisation process of urban areas
The discussion showed that the evaluation of the
improvements in distressed areas as a result of the promotion of
small and middle sized enterprises is very difficult. But there
is a consent that promoting small enterprises seems to be in comparison
with other approaches much more effective for the redevelopment
of an area considering the invested money, created new jobs or set
up businesses.
However, in the redevelopment of distressed areas the promotion
of economy is only effective when integrated within an overall urban
development concept.
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Next LUDA project international conference in Dresden
In Dresden on the 9th
December 2005 a conference of the LUDA project will take place. The
conference will deal with the different approaches towards initialising
of a sustainable improvement processes in large urban distressed areas.
The conference will be connected to the LUDA project workshop and the
public future workshop as a part of the 800 years city celebration.
More information will be available soon on the project website under www.luda-project.net
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worth knowing
7th European Commission Conference:
Safeguard Cultural Heritage. Understanding & Viability for the
Enlarged Europe
The conference will take
place in Prague, The Czech Republic from 31st May to 3rd
June 2006. The aim of the conference is the consolidation and impact
assessment of results achieved in EU research projects related to
movable and immovable cultural heritage. There will be a special focus
on exploitation and spin-offs of cultural heritage research results and
testing of the acceptability of new sustainability approaches and new
technologies by the user community, SMEs, owners, managers, restorers
and conservationists of cultural heritage. The deadline for abstracts
is 10th November 2005.
More information
www.arcchip.cz/ec-conference
International Conference: Cultural Facilities,
Catalysts for Territorial Development
The conference will take
place from 16th to 17th November 2005 in Vitry
s/Seine, France. On the occasion of the opening of a new Museum of
Modern Art in Vitry-sur-Seine on the 15th November 2005, the
county Council Val-de-Marne has engaged a debate on how a museum can be
more than a public institution in the service of the local community,
how such a major public facility can contribute to local and regional
development? During a 2-day conference ideas and experiences on these
issues will be exchanged. For more information please contact the
international secretariat INTA intainfo@inta-net.org
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International Conference on INDOOR AIR QUALITY in
Lisboa, 4-8th June 2006
HB 2006 is the 8th
in a series of Healthy Buildings Conferences that started in 1988 at
Stockholm and since then have taken place in Washington DC (1991),
Budapest (1994), Milan (1995), Washington DC (1997), Helsinki (2000)
and Singapore (2003). The issues addressed relate to indoor air quality
and its impact on health. The main focus is on buildings as confined
spaces where we spend around 90% of our life. HB 2006, aims primarily
at establishing the state-of-the-art of these health related topics in
scientific and technical terms, mainly at the level of the causes and
their prevention by means of adequate technological intervention. But
it also aims to contribute for results of social character, in the form
of legislation and normative methods and processes, for a better public
health and, therefore, for a better quality of life through an adequate
intervention along the several phases of building life: design,
construction and maintenance. Both the buildings themselves, according
to the needs of their users, and their mechanical systems will be
addressed, through a better characterization of the situation in the
field and the criteria to adopt in the evaluations.
The objectives of the conference in Lisboa are:
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To set
the state-of-the-art in the field of indoor air quality for all
buildings in all climatic conditions and its relation with health.
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To create a multi-disciplinary
forum on the development and advances of knowledge made in the field of
indoor air quality and climate to achieve healthy, comfortable and
productive environments.
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To contribute to the development
of methods for the assessment of environmental health hazards and their
effects on health and to improve risk assessment methodologies.
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To allow interactions among
scientists, policy makers, medical, legal and building professionals on
the application of state-of-the-art research to practical problems
encountered in the design, construction, operation and retrofitting of
buildings.
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To increase the awareness of the
importance of good indoor air together with energy-efficient buildings
for a healthy environment among all professionals dealing with the
quality of the built environment.
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To contribute to set strategies
and criteria for policy makers to introduce, in an urgent but coherent
and always evolutionary context, the precautionary principle in what
regards the role of materials and technologies; the relevance of the
architecture and building design and of the use and maintenance
practices of the building stock to safeguard healthy conditions for all.
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To support health and
environmental policy-making and to provide public information on links
between environment and health.
Please take into consideration, that the abstracts are
due by 15th November 2005. For more information and
registration please look under following address: www.hb2006.org
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DIFA-AWARD to recognise Europe’s best quarters
International real estate prize explores quality of life in European
quarters
Which quarter offers the best quality of
life in Europe and where can users find the most favourable life/work
conditions? The 2006 DIFA-AWARD organised by DIFA Deutsche Immobilien
Fonds AG is open for entries from urban quarters across Europe that
offer outstanding quality of life and thereby make a sustainable
contribution to the attractiveness of our towns and cities. Being held
for the fourth time, this urban real estate competition will explore
quality of life within completed quarters in terms of architecture,
planning and social aspects. The evaluation process will also include
criteria such as the mix of uses within the quarter, cooperation
between the private and public sectors and the level of participation
by users in designing their district, with cultural and social
diversity also being factors that help determine the quality of a
location. Prizes for the 2006 DIFA-AWARD total 30,000 euros, and the
competition is aimed at all European towns and cities with more than
100,000 inhabitants. The closing date for entries is 30 November 2005,
with the awards ceremony taking place at the EXPO REAL commercial
property show in Munich in October 2006.
The theme of this year’s DIFA-AWARD is
designed to highlight the conditions that help an urban location become
popular while at the same time satisfying a wide range of requirements
in terms of life/work balance. City planning and building departments,
economic development agencies and other municipal institutions are
invited to submit completed quarter projects to the 2006 DIFA-AWARD, as
are investors, project developers and architects. Competition materials
for the 2006 DIFA-AWARD are available for download now at www.difa-award.com.
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essay
The UNESCO World Heritage Convention - site
conservation and urban development and World Heritage Cities: the
Vienna Memorandum on World Heritage and Contemporary Architecture and
the Declaration on the Conservation of Historic Urban Landscapes
As an inter-governmental agency within
the UN-framework, UNESCO is attributed the role of promoting peace
through education, culture and science. It holds the mandate to serve
as a standard-setter and to promote international cooperation in its
fields of competence among its Member States. In this context,
international conventions, declarations and recommendations have been
elaborated, which guide a concerted approach to cultural action in the
signatory countries.
The World Heritage Convention
Since the adoption of the Convention concerning the Protection of the
World Cultural and Natural Heritage by the UNESCO General Conference in
1972, the Convention has remained the only international treaty to
address the safeguarding of both cultural and natural heritage using
the over-arching concept of "outstanding universal value". By signing
the World Heritage Convention, each State Party to the Convention
commits to protecting the properties on its territory, which are
inscribed on the World Heritage List. With 181 States Parties and 812
World Heritage properties inscribed in 137 countries, the Convention
has witnessed increasing success both in terms of attention for
cultural and natural heritage around the world and in terms of concrete
heritage protection measures in the respective countries.
According to the Convention, cultural heritage is defined as immovable
heritage in one of the three following categories: monuments, groups of
buildings, and sites. Over the last thirty years, its concept has been
broadened to include, among others, urban ensembles such as historic
city centres. This is reflected in the World Heritage List which can be
seen as the most widely acknowledged and visible result of the
Convention's work: around 200 World Heritage properties out of 812 are
inner city areas, and more than 300 World Heritage properties are
located in urban areas . To address the specificities of the growing
number of World Heritage Cities, a Cities Programme has been created in
1996, which helps to promote research and cooperation in the field of
conservation and development of urban areas.
With regard to the LUDA project, it is
worth noting that the cities of Dresden, Edinburgh, and Florence, as
well as Graz, Paris, and Tallinn comprise both World Heritage
properties and LUDA project areas. However, the respective project
areas and the designated World Heritage sites do not necessarily
overlap.
Developments in World Heritage Cities
With the designation as World Heritage, many cities have witnessed an
increase in attention - a development which is manifold and can result
in both positive and negative effects for the sites and their
surroundings. While World Heritage sites are supposed to be flagships
for good conservation practice, the reality of urban developments all
over the world often compromises this initial goal. Being historic
centres, many World Heritage sites are under immense development
pressure, leading to changes of the socio-economic structure
(gentrification), increased visitor flows etc.
Yet, not only in the sites themselves, but also around and beyond them,
potential threats to the values and integrity of the core areas arise.
For instance, high-rise constructions have been identified as potential
threats to the visual integrity of a historic urban centre; the
roof-scape and silhouette of which are often integral part of its
uniqueness.
Conservation in World Heritage Cities:
the Vienna Memorandum and the Declaration on the Conservation of
Historic Urban Landscapes
As the World Heritage Convention deals with tangible, immovable
heritage, the main approach to conservation and development is via the
physical urban environment - both the built environment and the open
spaces. Taking into account the legitimate need of cities to evolve,
while recalling each country's commitment to protect its World Heritage
properties, the "Vienna Memorandum on World Heritage and Contemporary
Architecture" has been elaborated with the aim to give guidance to
decision-making in World Heritage cities and beyond. It has introduced
the notion of "historic urban landscape" to capture the designated
sites in their urban contexts comprising their cohesion and continuity,
but also their character as expressions of change of cultural and
social values over time. It thus establishes the link to sustainable
development by taking into account all aspects and functions of urban
areas.
Drafted as a consensus document that needs to be applicable in all
regions of the world, the Vienna Memorandum is formulated to go beyond
national regulations and restrictions, and its main goal is rather to
emphasize and employ the moral duty and ethical value of World
Heritage.
Adopted as the outcome of the International Conference on " World
Heritage and Contemporary Architecture - Managing the historic urban
landscape " held in Vienna, Austria, from 12-14 May 2005, the Vienna
Memorandum remains that of a recommendation. Given the Memorandum's
importance for World Heritage cities, however, the General Assembly of
all States Parties to the Convention adopted a Declaration based on the
Memorandum to underline the broad significance of the subject for the
future management of World Heritage (Declaration on the Conservation of
Historic Urban Landscapes soon presented on the web site of World
Heritage Centres under http://whc.unesco.org).
Despite its focus on the specific conditions of World Heritage cities,
the Vienna Memorandum and the Declaration on the Conservation of
Historic Urban Landscapes are also applicable in other urban areas with
similar development challenges. The World Heritage Convention as well
as the Vienna Memorandum and the Declaration on the Conservation of
Historic Urban Landscapes can therefore be used as tools to address
problems in sustainable urban management in general. Both serve to find
solutions through dialogue and participatory work. As such, the
principles are coinciding with the principles of the LUDA project.
Moreover, in cases of distressed areas, the presence of a designated
World Heritage site in the city, such as in the case of Dresden, can be
utilized to draw attention to the neighbouring areas.
During the last three decades, the World
Heritage Convention has proven to be a powerful tool for safeguarding
and international cooperation. While World Heritage cities are
showcases on how conservation needs and competing forces in urban
development are dealt with, and how they could be balanced, their
specific status and visibility can be used to promote best practices
for urban conservation, which is to profit the entire urban area. With
the Vienna Memorandum and the Declaration on the Conservation of
Historic Urban Landscapes it is given guiding tool to promote balanced
urban conservation and development.
Kerstin Manz UNESCO
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United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization
Organisation des Nations Unies pour l'éducation, la science et
la culture
Centre du patrimoine mondial
World Heritage Centre
VIENNA MEMORANDUM on "World Heritage and Contemporary
Architecture - Managing the Historic Urban Landscape"
PREAMBLE
1. Recalling that the Vienna Memorandum
is the result of an international conference on the subject of "World
Heritage and Contemporary Architecture", which was requested by the
World Heritage Committee at its 27th session (Paris, 30 June-5 July
2003, Decision 27COM 7B.108) and held from 12 to 14 May 2005 in Vienna,
Austria, under the patronage of UNESCO and attended by more than 600
experts and professionals from 55 countries;
2. Bearing in mind the scope of UNESCO's
Convention concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural
Heritage (World Heritage Convention, 1972), and recalling its Articles
4 and 5, striving for global collaboration and the need for global
discussions on the subject of the strong economic dynamic and recent
structural changes in cities inscribed on UNESCO's World Heritage List;
3. Further recalling that sites are
inscribed on the World Heritage List on the basis of the Statement of
Outstanding Universal Value and that the preservation of this value
should be at the centre of any conservation policy and management
strategy;
4. Considering in particular the 1964
"International Charter for the Conservation and Restoration of
Monuments and Sites" (Venice Charter), the 1968 "UNESCO Recommendation
concerning the Preservation of Cultural Property endangered by Public
or Private works", the 1976 "UNESCO Recommendation concerning the
Safeguarding and Contemporary Role of Historic Areas", the 1982
ICOMOS-IFLA "International Charter for Historic Gardens" (Florence
Charter), the 1987 ICOMOS "Charter for the Conservation of Historic
Towns and Urban Areas" (Washington Charter), the 1994 Nara Document on
Authenticity, as well as the HABITAT II Conference and Agenda 21, which
was ratified by Member States in Istanbul (Turkey) in June 1996;
5. Desiring that the Vienna Memorandum
be seen, within the continuum of these afore-mentioned documents and
the current debate on the sustainable conservation of monuments and
sites, as a key statement for an integrated approach linking
contemporary architecture, sustainable urban development and landscape
integrity based on existing historic patterns, building stock and
context.
DEFINITIONS
6. The present Memorandum refers to
historic cities already inscribed or proposed for inscription on the
UNESCO World Heritage List, as well as to larger cities that have World
Heritage monuments and sites within their urban territories.
7. The historic urban landscape,
building on the 1976 "UNESCO Recommendation concerning the Safeguarding
and Contemporary Role of Historic Areas", refers to ensembles of any
group of buildings, structures and open spaces, in their natural and
ecological context, including archaeological and palaeontological
sites, constituting human settlements in an urban environment over a
relevant period of time, the cohesion and value of which are recognized
from the archaeological, architectural, prehistoric, historic,
scientific, aesthetic, socio-cultural or ecological point of view. This
landscape has shaped modern society and has great value for our
understanding of how we live today.
8. The historic urban landscape is
embedded with current and past social expressions and developments that
are place-based. It is composed of character-defining elements that
include land uses and patterns, spatial organization, visual
relationships, topography and soils, vegetation, and all elements of
the technical infrastructure, including small scale objects and details
of construction (curbs, paving, drain gutters, lights, etc.).
9. Contemporary architecture in the
given context is understood to refer to all significant planned and
designed interventions in the built historic environment, including
open spaces, new constructions, additions to or extensions of historic
buildings and sites, and conversions.
10. The expanding notion of cultural
heritage in particular over the last decade, which includes a broader
interpretation leading to recognition of human coexistence with the
land and human beings in society, requires new approaches to and
methodologies for urban conservation and development in a territorial
context. The international charters and recommendations have not yet
fully integrated this evolution.
11. The Vienna Memorandum focuses on the
impact of contemporary development on the overall urban landscape of
heritage significance, whereby the notion of historic urban landscape
goes beyond traditional terms of "historic centres", "ensembles" or
"surroundings", often used in charters and protection laws, to include
the broader territorial and landscape context.
12. The historic urban landscape
acquires its exceptional and universal significance from a gradual
evolutionary, as well as planned territorial development over a
relevant period of time through processes of urbanization,
incorporating environmental and topographic conditions and expressing
economic and socio-cultural values pertaining to societies. As such,
protection and conservation of the historic urban landscape comprises
the individual monuments to be found in protection registers, as well
as ensembles and their significant connections, physical, functional
and visual, material and associative, with the historic typologies and
morphologies.
PRINCIPLES and AIMS
13. Continuous changes in functional
use, social structure, political context and economic development that
manifest themselves in the form of structural interventions in the
inherited historic urban landscape may be acknowledged as part of the
city's tradition, and require a vision on the city as a whole with
forward-looking action on the part of decision-makers, and a dialogue
with the other actors and stakeholders involved.
14. The central challenge of
contemporary architecture in the historic urban landscape is to respond
to development dynamics in order to facilitate socio-economic changes
and growth on the one hand, while simultaneously respecting the
inherited townscape and its landscape setting on the other. Living
historic cities, especially World Heritage cities, require a policy of
city planning and management that takes conservation as one key point
for conservation. In this process, the historic city's authenticity and
integrity, which are determined by various factors, must not be
compromised.
15. The future of our historic urban
landscape calls for mutual understanding between policy makers, urban
planners, city developers, architects, conservationists, property
owners, investors and concerned citizens, working together to preserve
the urban heritage while considering the modernization and development
of society in a culturally and historic sensitive manner, strengthening
identity and social cohesion.
16. Taking into account the emotional
connection between human beings and their environment, their sense of
place, it is fundamental to guarantee an urban environmental quality of
living to contribute to the economic success of a city and to its
social and cultural vitality.
17. A central concern of physical and
functional interventions is to enhance quality of life and production
efficiency by improving living, working and recreational conditions and
adapting uses without compromising existing values derived from the
character and significance of the historic urban fabric and form. This
means not only improving technical standards, but also a rehabilitation
and contemporary development of the historic environment based upon a
proper inventory and assessment of its values, as well as adding
high-quality cultural expressions.
GUIDELINES for CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT
18. Decision-making for interventions
and contemporary architecture in a historic urban landscape demand
careful consideration, a culturally and historic sensitive approach,
stakeholder consultations and expert know-how. Such a process allows
for adequate and proper action for individual cases, examining the
spatial context between old and new, while respecting the authenticity
and integrity of historic fabric and building stock.
19. A deep understanding of the history,
culture and architecture of place, as opposed to object buildings only,
is crucial to the development of a conservation framework and single
architectural commissions should be informed by urbanism and its tools
for analyses of typologies and morphologies.
20. An essential factor in the planning
process is a timely recognition and formulation of opportunities and
risks, in order to guarantee a well-balanced development and design
process. The basis for all structural interventions is a comprehensive
survey and analysis of the historic urban landscape as a way of
expressing values and significance. Investigating the long-term effects
and sustainability of the planned interventions is an integral part of
the planning process and aims at protecting the historic fabric,
building stock and context.
21. Taking into account the basic
definition (according to Article 7 of this Memorandum), urban planning,
contemporary architecture and preservation of the historic urban
landscape should avoid all forms of pseudo-historical design, as they
constitute a denial of both the historical and the contemporary alike.
One historical view should not supplant others, as history must remain
readable, while continuity of culture through quality interventions is
the ultimate goal.
GUIDELINES for URBAN DEVELOPMENT
22. Ethic standards and a demand for
high-quality design and execution, sensitive to the cultural-historic
context, are prerequisites for the planning process. Architecture of
quality in historic areas should give proper consideration to the given
scales, particularly with reference to building volumes and heights. It
is important for new development to minimize direct impacts on
important historic elements, such as significant structures or
archaeological deposits.
23. Spatial structures in and around
historic cities are to be enhanced through urban design and art as they
are key elements of the renaissance of historic cities: urban design
and art express their specific historical, social and economic
components and transmit them to forthcoming generations.
24. Preservation of World Heritage sites
also involves the design of public space: particular attention is to be
paid to functionality, scale, materials, lighting, street furniture,
advertising, and vegetation, to name a few. Urban planning
infrastructure in heritage zones must include all measures to respect
the historic fabric, building stock and context, and to mitigate the
negative effects of traffic circulation and parking.
25. Townscapes, roofscapes, main visual
axes, building plots and types are integral parts of the identity of
the historic urban landscape. With regard to renewal, the historic
roofscape and the original building plots serve as the basis for
planning and design.
26. As a general principle, proportion
and design must fit into the particular type of historic pattern and
architecture, while removing the core of building stock worthy of
protection ("façadism") does not constitute an appropriate mean
of structural intervention. Special care should be taken to ensure that
the development of contemporary architecture in World Heritage cities
is complementary to values of the historic urban landscape and remains
within limits in order not to compromise the historic nature of the
city.
WAYS and MEANS
27. Management of the dynamic changes
and developments in World Heritage historic urban landscapes
encompasses precise knowledge of the territory and its elements of
heritage significance identified through scientific methodes of
inventory, the relevant laws, regulations, tools and procedures, which
are formalized in a Management Plan, according to the Operational
Guidelines for the Implementation of the World Heritage Convention.
28. The development and implementation
of a Management Plan for historic urban landscapes requires the
participation of an interdisciplinary team of experts and
professionals, as well as timely initiation of comprehensive public
consultation.
29. Quality management of the historic
urban landscape aims at permanent preservation and improvement of
spatial, functional and design-related values. In this respect, special
emphasis is to be placed on the contextualization of contemporary
architecture in the historic urban landscape and Cultural or Visual
Impact Assessment studies should accompany proposals for contemporary
interventions.
30. Economic aspects of urban
development should be bound to the goals of long-term heritage
preservation.
31. Historic buildings, open spaces and
contemporary architecture contribute significantly to the value of the
city by branding the city's character. Contemporary architecture can be
a strong competitive tool for cities as it attracts residents,
tourists, and capital. Historic and contemporary architecture
constitute an asset to local communities, which should serve
educational purposes, leisure, tourism, and secure market value of
properties.
RECOMMENDATIONS
The following considerations are
directed to the World Heritage Committee and UNESCO:
A) With regard to historic urban areas
already inscribed on the World Heritage List, the concept of the
historic urban landscape and the recommendations expressed in this
Memorandum need to be taken into account when reviewing any potential
or ascertained impact on the integrity of a World Heritage property.
These principles should be enhanced by plans which delineate the
specific measures to be taken for the protection of the historic urban
landscape.
B) When considering the inscription of
new properties and sites of historic urban areas on the World Heritage
List, it is recommended that the concept of the historic urban
landscape be included in the nomination and evaluation process.
C) UNESCO is invited to study the
possibility for formulating a new recommendation to complement and
update the existing ones on the subject of historic urban landscapes,
with special reference to the contextualization of contemporary
architecture which should be submitted, at a future date, to the
General Conference of UNESCO.
(20 May 2005)
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Cities
stories
Florence
1. Florence-Short introduction to the
city
Florence, or "Florentia" as it was
originally named by the Romans, was founded in the first century BC as
a small settlement located at the foot of the ancient Etruscan Fiesole.
It rises on the banks of the river Arno, which bisects the city, and
spreads across a vast plain surrounded by the Careggi, Fiesole,
Settignano, Arcetri and Bellosguardo hills.
Initially established as a Roman
"castrum", Florentia soon assumed the appearance of a real town with a
Forum (now Piazza della Repubblica), thermal baths (via delle Terme),
and amphitheatre (via Tòrta).
Florence reached its highest points,
economically and culturally, between the eleventh and fifteenth
centuries as a free State; balancing the authority of the Emperors with
that of the Pope, and overcoming the problems of internal fights
between Guelphs and Ghibellines. In the fifteenth century, Florence was
ruled by the Signoria of the Medici.
The Medici subsequently acquired the
title Grand Duke of Tuscany. This was the city's most splendid period
for art, culture, politics and economics. The Grand Duchy of Tuscany
was then ruled, in the eighteenth century, by the Duke of Lorraine
until, in 1860, Tuscany joined the Kingdom of Italy, with Florence as
the capital from 1865 to 1871. This marked the beginning of intense
redevelopment and rehabilitation processes within the city, leading to
the destruction of the city walls erasure of the medieval urban fabric
in the centre, endowing Florence with its present-day appearance.
2. Points regarding the administrative
and decision-making planning structure
The Territory Government, according to
the Italian Constitution, is a matter of "concurrent legislation": in
other words, the regions have legislative powers, except in determining
the general principles, classified to the legislation of the Central
State.
Every Region, therefore, has its own
laws, which determine the planning and programming of the territory. In
Tuscany, the programming instruments are essentially three: to which
corresponds other territorial entity: P.I.T. (Territorial Plan of
Strategies) by the Region, P.T.C.P. (Territorial Plan of Provincial
Coordination), P.S.C. (Municipal Structural plan). All the three levels
(Region, Province, Municipality) supply to the "Territory Management"
according to what the Regional Law established; for specific fields
also the Communities Mounts, the Authorities of River Basin and the
Neighbourhood City Councils take part to territory government.
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3. LUDA area description
3.1. Boundaries
The Brozzi-Peretola area is located on the periphery of
the city, along the main road to Pistoia, which is parallel to and in
proximity to the Arno River. It extends across about 1/20th of the
whole area under the administration of the Municipality of Florence.
The LUDA's physical borders are as follows:
- NORTH: A 11 highway &
Peretola Airport
- SOUTH: Arno River & Florence
- Pisa railway
- EAST: Florence - Pisa - Livorno
railway
- WEST: A 1 highway
The LUDA boundaries coincide with those of the UTOE n°3 .
3.2. Historical background
Florence's LUDA case-study originally
consisted of several small historical settlements, founded in the early
Middle Ages, along a road running parallel to, and close by the river
Arno. These settlements, in the Brozzi-Peretola area, further
developed/expanded during the fifteenth century. Around the end of the
millennium, the road network had developed and many churches containing
important master pieces (e.g. the Luca della Robbia's ciborium of 1441
and the Mino da Fiesole's baptismal font of 1466) were built along the
most important roads.
As the town of Prato developed, the Via
Pratese was built. This road crossed the plain (la Piana), through
Campi, and reached Florence after passing through Peretola. Peretola
became a strategic location at the crossroads between the Via Pratese
and Via Pistoiese, where the large church of S. Maria a Peretola was
founded.
In the first half of the nineteenth
century important territorial changes were determined, on one hand, by
the Florence-Livorno railway construction on the new bank of the river
Arno. As a result of this construction work, the river was thoroughly
regulated and canalized, and the area of the Piagge, a plain spanning
the right bank from Peretola to S. Donnino, underwent intensive
exploitation. On the other hand, territorial changes resulted from
increasing demands for residential accommodation, due demographic
increases resulting also from the flourishing straw industry. The
population boom clashed with a restrictive policy, prohibiting the
construction of new buildings, which led to the subdivision of large
buildings (already in poor condition, owing to their natural
obsolescence) into small flats with communal sanitary facilities:
courtyards and vegetable gardens fell victim to these developments as
existing buildings were extended to create low-cost housing. By the end
of the nineteenth century, building cooperatives were established by
the local workers, which lead, in turn, to the construction of row
houses: such dwellings, built according to a traditional scheme,
followed the directories of development of the historical settlements.
Towards the end of the 1950s the
building sector was in full swing: the construction of the imposing
urban periphery of Novoli began as a westward extension of the S.
Jacopino quarter which was built at the beginning of the century; at
the same time new row houses were built around the historical
settlements as their natural appendix, and new streets were opened.
This indiscriminate and no rule territory occupation represents the
start for the missing "identity" of the ancient historical settlements.
In the 1962, the Town Plan of the Florentine municipality settled the
"saturation" and the reconstruction of the residential area of Peretola
and Brozzi: old properties and two flats houses were demolished, to
make room for new blocks of flats and built other big buildings near
Peretola. In 1975, the municipality adopted a variation of the General
Town Plan, classifying the villages as "Minor Historical and
Environmental Centres", thus limiting developments to restoration work
and sanitary improvements. At the end of the 1970s, the urbanization of
the Piagge began due to the implementation of the plans for low-cost
housing: large buildings separated by vast spaces (8,500 inhabitants on
a more than 60 hectare area) were constructed.
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Florence Master Plan UTOEs (elementary homogeneous territorial units)
map
Please click on the thumbnail
for a larger image!

Historical pictures
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3.3 Problems affecting the area
The Florence LUDA area is not a
homogeneous one. Some historical settlements exist, in addition to old
industrial plants, an inactive incinerator, big and heavy
infrastructures, disqualifying activities consuming large territory
portions, waste land polluted, water courses, areas devoted to reduce
the hydraulic risks, industrial zones. This combination has resulted in
an area that suffers from a multitude of problems (social, economical,
environmental, physical, and so on) which, together, create a vicious
circle of decline and segregation, endowing the area with negative
image that deters both potential residents and potential investors from
other local areas.
The culmination of different ethnic communities has resulted in rapid
and radical changes to the local social structure, affecting:
- lifestyles;
- cultural interests
The original inhabitants of this area are trying to re-define the
identity they feel they have lost as a community, and as a territory.
This situation is due to:
- lack of, or insufficient,
sense of identity of the historical settlements;
- separation among native Italian
people communities living inside the LUDA area (e.g. Le Piagge, Brozzi,
Peretola);
- isolation and a lack of
integration among different ethnic communities.
The problems highlighted by local
stakeholders include the high, and increasing, proportions of elderly
people and the large number of Chinese immigrants residing in the area.
The Chinese community remains socially isolated and many Chinese are
competing, economically, with the local Italian community. In spite of
the traditional civic participation, at the LUDA project starting have
been showed a sort of distrust in the LUDA participation process, due
to some previous not fruitful experiences.
The main economic problems, as
identified by local stakeholders and the Municipality, relate to a
general slump in the economy, resulting from international economic
crises. The commercial and manufacturing industries have been worst
hit, particularly small businesses that lack the capital to comply with
new technological and administrative regulations. Examples of these
include the installation of heating systems, up-to-date electronic
equipment and shop-fitting: without these, small businesses struggle to
compete with larger businesses at the cutting-edge of the consumer
market, such as supermarkets, mega stores and out-of-town shopping
malls. These large businesses are able to sell a wider range of goods
at lower prices, in a pleasant environment, with extensive parking
facilities, easy access and of cultural, recreational and leisure time
activities.
As a result, commercial activities
(shops) in the two main LUDA historical settlements have, in the last
few years, reduced from 44 to 15 in Brozzi (representing a loss of
about 66%), and from 49 to 29 in Peretola (representing a loss of about
41%). Even if the phenomenon is investing both the Florentine and the
national commercial sector, these figures are well over municipal and
national averages.
The most recently established production plants (circa 1970), located
near the new via dè Cattani zone, were realized in a no planned
way. Neither programmes nor plans were preventively foreseen and
designed. The result is a chaotic productive settlement following no
economic or territorial logic structure. These plants are largely under
the management of Chinese businessmen, many of whom do not seem to
adhere to administrative and fiscal legislation or labour regulations
and rules. This produces a divide between the Chinese production
community and other local plants, which suffer from the effects of
unfair competition. In addition, it can be noted that the revenue
earned by Chinese workers has little effect on the local economy as it
tends to remain within the Chinese community, is sent back to China, or
is spent in the aforementioned mega stores or shopping centres.
From the point of view of the building
sector, land ownership is clearly fragmented, thus deterring any
potential new investors or promoters from expressing interest in the
area. Owners of small plots of land or buildings are only interested in
the refurbishment processes on an individual level,
building-by-building. It would be possible to involve them in a wider
process at urban level if a public-private partnership (among public
agencies and large private companies) can be organised and developed in
advance, and these owners of smaller properties were given the option
to join.
Any attempt to improve the low quality of life is fruitless without
reorganization of both physical and socio-economic structures.
Facilities are not diffused and are mostly of low quality.
The main environmental problems of the
area are air, soil and water pollution and periodic floods. These
result from several different factors.
The high level of traffic, causing air
pollution, is a significant problem.
The area is delimitated and crossed by some important road
infrastructures which are not screened. As a consequence, near those
roads, there is an air pollution phenomenon caused mainly by the heavy
traffic of some activities present in the area used by the whole town.
Other relevant environmental problems specific to this area are noise
pollution, from the airport and vehicular traffic on the main roads,
and the risks associated with periodic floods. In addition, various
water channels are polluted by sewage, causing offensive odours. The
area is chequered by polluted soil. This phenomenon has been caused by
the use of this area, particularly Le Piagge, as a dumping ground for
northern production activities; and the waste deposited inside the area
of Le Piagge during the Arno flood of 1966. As a result, the few local
green areas are short of trees which would contribute to improving air
quality and filtering pollutants.
The LUDA's boundaries and the large internal roads themselves represent
a problem as they are heavy infrastructures which separate the LUDA
from the rest of the city, producing subsections of the area which
don't communicate even from an urban point of view.
In relation, high levels of traffic
present a considerable problem. The two main effects, besides air and
noise pollution, are:
- the roads divide the area to two
parts (territorial);
- the number of traffic accidents
is high.
The internal mobility of the area
represents a problem in as far as residents depend upon private
transport. Directly related to the use of cars is another problem: the
lack of parking for residents, especially in Peretola and Brozzi. In
these areas, residents have taken to parking by the roadsides, which is
prohibited due to insufficient space. This increases the risk of
accidents as pedestrians are forced off of the pavements and onto the
road itself. The mobility system depends too much on Pistoiese Street,
causing an increase in traffic there. In fact, the Piagge inhabitants
who need to get to the internal parts of Le Piagge, must travel through
Pistoiese Street.
There is a great deal of building
dilapidation: in the small boroughs, due to poor maintenance, and in Le
Piagge due to the poor quality of social public buildings, which has
also caused some problems in internal buildings environmental comfort.
The area is lacking in publicly equipped and protected green spaces and
existing green areas are poorly maintained. In example, most of the
trees along the Pistoiese and Pratese streets were famously cut down,
and have never been replaced. This lack is sorely felt felt amongst the
local community.
The prospect of future for the area is
perceived in having a mission useful for all the city of Florence and
for the metropolitan area too (for instance social or technological
linked to the forthcoming railway multifunctional dynamic centre).
The railway multifunctional dynamic centre, currently a work in
progress, could help the redevelopment of the industrial sites and
business activities;
The Master Plan of Florence, in accord with the local stakeholders
which are taking part in the LUDA project, presents the possibility of
developing the LUDA to provide a link between Florence and the
metropolitan west area. The presence of the historical burgs provided
with a beautiful and artistic building heritage, could become tourist
attractions. Moreover it has been prospected to realize a "natural
commercial" centre within the burgs putting some particular thematic
market in the squares and retraining the present shops. Another
positive aspect is the existence of space for the creation of a park
along the Arno riverside. The park could enhance community relationship
with the river and create urban spaces which can promote a positive
image and figure as an attraction for the whole of Florence.
Developments along the Arno riverside could also help to improve air
quality for the area as could the creation of a cycle path linking
Piana and Renai to the centre of Florence. Encouraging residents to use
the cycle path could see a fall in the use of cars and improvements in
the air quality. Moreover, regenerating Piagge's disused zones will
raise the quality of the urban design and become a pole of attraction
for the whole city.
4. Stakeholders
The main result of the LUDA
stakeholders' group activities was a shared proposal about the
objectives to be pursued in order to improve the quality of life of the
LUDA inhabitants.
In developing the objectives list, the stakeholders were supported by
the President of Neighbourhood 5 and by COMFI and TAeD LUDA project
researchers.
After a useful debate, during the public conference and in other
meetings with the council members and the municipality officers, this
list of goals became the list proposed by the local stakeholders and is
now on the way to become the basis for the municipality's work in
programming and planning the future of the LUDA.
The document on Florence LUDA
stakeholders' objectives was presented and discussed in a public
conference on 4th February 2005. The public conference provided the
opportunity to illustrate and to explain to the City's representatives
and to the LUDA's residents the work developed by the local
stakeholders group in collaboration with the local political
administrators, facilitated by the LUDA researchers. A list of requests
was presented as well.
The public conference was organized by the president of Neighbourhood 5
and was an important local event as: it was attended by a relevant
number of the citizens of the LUDA area; six city government
councillors (in charge for different matters related to LUDA
redevelopment process) took part at the conference; and, from the
business side, the general manager of the airport agency and the
general manager of the national railway company took part at the
discussion.
The public meeting in February
stimulated engagement and participation in the decision-making
processes, for planning and programming in the area, for some of the
more sceptical stakeholders.
One of the reasons behind the
conference's success was the increased cooperation and mutual
understanding within the stakeholders' group and between stakeholders
and the municipality. Of course the positive and proactive role of
Municipality was crucial.
As further result of the LUDA group work, an "observation" was
presented to the adopted Structural Plan of Florence. This observation
concerned several aspects both on city level and on UTOE1 (the LUDA
level).
After that, will be open a table of confront with the Florence
Municipality. The expected results should be the identification of
"participated objectives and actions" to improve and goal orient the
planning activity of the Florence Municipality. Some actions should be
used as inputs to the Structural Plan and to Planning Regulation (the
forthcoming Master Plan) of Florence.
The LUDA stakeholders will assume a relevant role in the Area Programme
project (see next paragraph) that the LUDA researchers will discuss
with the public administration.
The stakeholders' specific role and tasks, in this phase, are to be
clearly defined, but the general idea is that they are required to
perform a relevant role in the monitoring phase of the actions and of
the key projects that the Municipality will carry out.
5. An experimental instrument for the
LUDA area governance: THE AREA PROGRAMME
The urban planning instruments at
Municipality level (Structural Plan, Urban Planning Code) are finalized
to the construction of rules, the regulation of actions to be
developed, the compatibilities to satisfy etc., without referring to
the priorities, the sequence, the timing, the operators' contingent
interests (Municipality included).
At the same time, the actual town planning and the sector plans or
programmes take in consideration the specific applicative ambit only
which are referred to, with short relationship among them.
Both territory planning and the sector plans or programs take in a
lacking consideration the coordination: between the interventions and
the transforming actions in the territory, the possibilities, the
sequences etc. that is, on the contrary, an essential requirement.
Essentially the management of the territory in dynamic-functional
terms, called in special way governance, turned out to be more useful
supporting the urban planning also with the Area Planning, following
the objective to secure higher levels of feasibility and overall
coherence, to improve the capacity, to increase the control and to
improve the previsions. In substance, while the planning instrument
underlines the aspect what you must or can do, the Area Programme does
"how"; the first one insists on the consistency system, while the
second one in the consistency process. Both of them support the
government of the territory in a synergic and complementing way,
increasing its effectiveness.
The Area Programme should develop the
following functions: Informative function: collecting, treating, making
public all available information pertinent to actual or expected
interventions and transforming actions, as well as the ones required to
pursue the objectives fixed by the General Town-planning, or included
in sectional plans and programmes made by the Municipality and other
public administrations, or the ones available among private operators,
their organizations and so on.
Function of co-ordination: co-ordinating those interventions with
regard to timing, location, sequence, sources and single operators.
Function of evaluation: considering
those actions and interventions from the point of view of their
functional, temporal and financial compatibility.
Function of forecast: forecasting and
displaying both the obstacles and the potentialities we can meet with
during the carrying out of transforming actions and interventions in
the area, as well as pointing out behaviours and actions most useful to
improve the conditions for their realization.
Further these functions, The Area
Programme can develop other two important functions for the government
of the territory:
- It can develop more advanced
functions like the institution of participating strategy that points
out the area objectives, the preferential stakeholders, the resources
to achieve those objectives and so on;
- It can hold up and facilitate the
participation of some interested subjects to the actions and
interventions of the transformation of the territory for two reasons:
1) it is a specialist informative font; 2) it can help to create
agreements, being an instrument of collaboration and clashing.
The Florence Municipality Council is
going to approve a document for implementing the area programme in LUDA
area. A group of six councillors, head by the urban planning one, will
coordinate this activity in accordance with the LUDA research Florence
team and with some technical office of the Municipality. The group of
the LUDA stakeholders will take part at this activity.
Annalisa Pirello,
Chiara Lotti, Franco Landini (City of Florence)
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Aerial picture of the area
Please click on the thumbnail
for a larger image!
soil to be reclaimed
Pistoiese
street
railway
multifunctional dynamic
centre project
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hints & upcoming events
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Next events
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8-10 December 2005
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Workshop and Public Conference in Dresden
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disclaimer/
impressum
LUDA Project Team
Project Director: Professor Bernhard Mueller
Leibniz Institute of
Ecological and Regional Development IOER
Weberplatz 1
01217 Dresden (Germany)
fon 0049 351 4679 0
fax 0049 351 4679 212
Editorial staff
Dr. Carlos Smaniotto Costa
Christiane Westphal
Patrycja Bielawska - Roepke
Leander Kuettner
Markus Eggerman
luda-team@ioer.de
www.luda-project.net
We are not responsible for the content of external
web-sites connected with this e-newsletter.
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