RIARTE Home
    • español
    • English
  • English 
    • español
    • English
  • Login
View Item 
  •   RIARTE Home
  • 2. INVESTIGACIÓN CIENTÍFICA
  • Capítulos de libros científicos
  • View Item
  •   RIARTE Home
  • 2. INVESTIGACIÓN CIENTÍFICA
  • Capítulos de libros científicos
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Placemaking at a time of changing port city relations

Identifiers
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12251/3891
View/Open: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004542389_006
ISBN: 978-90-04-54238-9
DOI: 10.1163/9789004542389_006
Share
Statistics
View Usage Statistics
Metadata
Show full item record
Author
Hein, Carola; García Esparza, Juan Antonio; Ažman Momirski, Lučka
Date
2023
Subject/s

Arquitectura portuaria

Rehabilitación urbana

Regeneración urbana

Planificación urbanística

Unesco Subject/s

3305.11 Puertos

3305.17 Edificios Industriales y Comerciales

3319.06 Transportes Marítimos

3305.37 Planificación Urbana

6201.03 Urbanismo

6311.06 Sociología Urbana

6309.06 Movilidad Social

Abstract

Cities around the world, from New York, to London and Hong Kong, lost much of their shipping functions within decades after the opening of new container terminals on their outskirts. Many port authorities and city governments adapted their ports rapidly to maintain their city’s edge in a tight competition. Over the last five decades, as public and private decision-makers around the world built new ports and facilities for the increased transhipment of goods and people, responding to similar challenges and opportunities, developing new ports, dredging waterways, transforming storage and transhipment in response to changing ship sizes, new containers or new commodity flows, the old waterfronts in New York, Hamburg, Amsterdam, Philadelphia and Sydney lost their leadership function as global ports. They became ghost districts, challenges to urban development. Spaces that hosted port activities in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries contain heritage buildings and industrial structures on a scale that can be repurposed for urban functions that are often well connected to urban sites and infrastructure. In recent decades these sites have become hubs of urban growth and tourism. Many cities had to develop new strategies for the inner-city ports that had fallen empty and for the large number of people who had lost their jobs in packaging, transportation and storage.

Cities around the world, from New York, to London and Hong Kong, lost much of their shipping functions within decades after the opening of new container terminals on their outskirts. Many port authorities and city governments adapted their ports rapidly to maintain their city’s edge in a tight competition. Over the last five decades, as public and private decision-makers around the world built new ports and facilities for the increased transhipment of goods and people, responding to similar challenges and opportunities, developing new ports, dredging waterways, transforming storage and transhipment in response to changing ship sizes, new containers or new commodity flows, the old waterfronts in New York, Hamburg, Amsterdam, Philadelphia and Sydney lost their leadership function as global ports. They became ghost districts, challenges to urban development. Spaces that hosted port activities in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries contain heritage buildings and industrial structures on a scale that can be repurposed for urban functions that are often well connected to urban sites and infrastructure. In recent decades these sites have become hubs of urban growth and tourism. Many cities had to develop new strategies for the inner-city ports that had fallen empty and for the large number of people who had lost their jobs in packaging, transportation and storage.

Collections
  • Capítulos de libros científicos

Browse

All of RIARTECommunities and CollectionsAuthorsTitlesSubjectsUnesco subjectsTypes of documentsThis CollectionAuthorsTitlesSubjectsUnesco subjectsTypes of documents

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Help

About RIARTEFAQLocate informationPoliciesPolítica de Protección de Datos

OA Publishing Policies

Logo SHERPA/RoMEOLogo Dulcinea

Content diffusion

Logo RecolectaLogo Hispana

Copyright © Spanish General Council of Technical Architecture 2018 | Legal notice | Política de Protección de Datos

Facebook
Twitter
Contact Us Send Feedback