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Check URBACT's latest stories, updates and events!

 

  • Städtische Armut und die Pandemie - Wir erleben nicht nur eine Gesundheitskrise.

    Covid-19 ist nicht nur eine Gesundheitskrise - es ist auch eine soziale und wirtschaftliche Krise, die die Ärmsten am härtesten trifft. In diesem Artikel untersucht URBACT-Experte Ivan Tosic, was dies für die Bemühungen von URBACT bedeuten könnte, lokale Lösungen zur Bekämpfung der städtischen Armut zu unterstützen.

    Hauke Meyer

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  • Ändert Corona die Spielregeln für die Neue Leipzig-Charta?

    Schon lange vor dem Ausbruch von Covid-19 startete der Dialogprozess zum Schreiben der Neuen Leipzig-Charta. Zwingen die jüngsten Erfahrungen mit der Pandemie nun die deutsche EU-Ratspräsidentschaft dazu, ihre ganze Vision der künftigen Stadtentwicklung zu überdenken? Oder hebt Corona nur die Notwendigkeit der Prinzipien hervor, die in der Entwurfsversion der Charta bereits festgeschrieben sind? Wir sprachen mit Jonas Scholze, Geschäftsführer des Deutschen Verbandes für Wohnungswesen, Städtebau und Raumordnung, um dem auf den Grund zu gehen.

    Heike Mages

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  • Play and Public Procurement

    by Matthew Baqueriza-Jackson, AD-Hoc Expert for Playful Paradigm | Services and activities require Municipalities to buy goods, services and works through the process of Public Procurement, historically viewed as very bureaucratic and technical. How can we procure goods, services and works for Play and Games in a more efficient, effective and playful manner?

    CREAA

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  • Is Covid a game-changer for the New Leipzig Charter?

    Expert Eddy Adams asks about the latest developments and impacts of Covid-19 on the renewed Leipzig Charter.

    Eddy Adams

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  • 10 Steps to Po-up Success

    Julia Hussman, former pop-up manager at Altena, shares lessons learned from developing and implementing a pop-up programme

    1. Set your goal and think of your vision
    2. Find a suitable executing organisation
    3. Create material to promote project
    4. negotiate with shop owners, sign contracts, prepare exposés of shops
    5. Acquire project partners
    6. Define framework
    7. Determine financial incentive/support
    8. Recruit potential Pop Up operators
    9. Take care of them and their issues
    10. Plan marketing, PR and events

    s.schmidt

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  • REIMAGINE THE EMPTINESS: COMBINING PLACEMAKING AND POP-UP SHOP INITIATIVES (by Daniele Terzariol, Urbact Ad-hoc expert)

    Empty commercial spaces can be understood as urban supplies for the experimentation with collective dreams, not just places for  relaunching trade. Which point of view do we have to adopt to reinterpret abandoned places and to give them new life and shape? How to combine and integrate temporary uses into longer term  urban regeneration processes? How to rekindle interest or provoke debate on the tools, policies, laws and practices of reactivating marginal, degraded and underutilized spaces? How can we make them accessible again and capable of answering society's housing, leisure and work needs? Some recent design experiences in Europe, many of which are funded through URBACT encourage experimentation with practices that reuse  places by extending their use  to a plurality of actors, fertilizing abandoned spaces with new activities and uses. Than can  trigger new economic activity  that combine architectural conversion with public art, creative urbanism, activism and social design. These reuse projects will be the result of continuous selection and settlement processes.

    Commercial services maintain and amplify a socially aggregating function: they aren’t a “public cities” in the strict sense, but they represent places where a plurality of "public life" activities take place and, with very different forms, they continue to connote spaces potentially and variously "central” in local settlement systems. Temporary informal spaces near small commercial realities can be considered places of participation and sharing, places where you can experience forms of community and where you can take control and management of spaces, even if for a short time and with limited purpose activities.

    The Urbact “Re-growCity” network is experimenting with the creation  of pop up shops. These are temporary uses of vacant retail property by local entrepreneurs, artists or community groups.  Deepening the dynamics of temporary reuse for the revival of trade placemaking is an important element for successful cases. Below we will analyze some examples, which are inspirational.

    s.schmidt

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