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[³í¹®] Àç»ý»ç¾÷Áö±¸ ³» °ø°¡ ¹× °øÅÍ È°¿ëÀ» ÅëÇÑ À¯¿¬ÀûÀÎ µµ½ÃÀç»ý ¹æ¾È ¿¬±¸ / Flexible Urban Regeneration: Creative Use of Empty Houses and Vacant Plots - Focused on Temporary Uses and Tactical Urbanism - / 'ÀϽÃÀû È°¿ë' ¹× 'Àü¼úÀû µµ½Ã·Ð'ÀÇ »ç·Ê °íÂûÀ» ÅëÇØ |
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±¹Åä°èȹ, v.48 n.6(Åë±Ç 201È£) (2013-11) |
ÆäÀÌÁö |
½ÃÀÛÆäÀÌÁö(347) ÃÑÆäÀÌÁö(20) |
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µµ½ÃÀç»ý ; °ø°¡ ; °øÅÍ ; À¯¿¬ÀûÀÎ µµ½ÃÀç»ý ; ÀϽÃÀû È°¿ë ; Àü¼úÀû µµ½Ã·Ð ; Urban Regeneration ; Empty Property ; Temporary Uses ; Temporary City ; Tactical Urbanism |
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This paper aims at inducing implications from overseas cases, related to urban regeneration strategy, and has focused on considering vacant real estates as productive rather than useless. In order to make this study successful, this research explore 'temporary uses' and 'tactical urbanism' as theory, and 'Community Gardens', 'Site Pre-Vitalization', 'Pop-up Town Hall', and 'Temporary Urbanism Initiatives' in Washington D.C. as cases. They support temporary, ephemeral and experimental land use and small-short term projects for urban regeneration. This approach can contribute to urban regeneration as 'bottom-up' planning instruments and encourage participation. In addition, temporary uses permit a trial-and-error as incremental planning approach. When these done well, such small-scale changes may be conceived as the first step in realizing lasting change. In Korea, due to economic recession a lot of urban regeneration projects have stopped and abandoned empty property gave rise to many problems. Now we need to think differently, and allow 'temporary uses' for urban regeneration strategy. |