urban manufacturing, city planning and design, industrial heritage
Industrial Urbanism: Exploring the City–Production Dynamic
This issue focuses on the spatial implications and physical manifestation of contemporary manufacturing in the city. In doing so it addresses four key questions. 1. What are the contemporary relationships between city and industry? 2. Should contemporary manufacturing be subjected to the same rules and zoning regulations as its predecessors? 3. What physical planning and design strategies should cities pursue to retain, attract, and increase manufacturing activity? 4. What is to be done with vacant factories and neglected industrial sites.
About this issue
Issue number
Volume 43 – Number 1
Summary
This issue focuses on the spatial implications and physical manifestation of contemporary manufacturing in the city.
Contents
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Industrial Urbanism: Exploring the City–Production Dynamic
Tali Hatuka -
Industrial Urbanism: Typologies, Concepts and Prospects
Tali Hatuka, Eran Ben-Joseph and Minjee Kim -
Innovation and Production: Advanced Manufacturing Technologies, Trends and Implications for US Cities and Regions
Elisabeth B. Reynolds -
A New Model of Hybrid Building as a Catalyst for the Redevelopment of Urban Industrial Districts
Timothy Love -
Zoning and Its Discontents: Integrating Old Industrial Parks with the City
Dan Price -
Hybrid Factory | Hybrid City
Nina Rappaport -
Historic Heavy Industrial Sites: Obstacles and Opportunities
Sunny Menozzi Peterson -
The Place of the Industrial Past: The Adaptive Reuse of the Industrial Heritage in the Engenho Central de Piracicaba, Brazil
Gabriela Campagnol -
The Autonomous Industrial Park: A Global Model with Local Variations
Roni Bar -
Facing Forward: Trends and Challenges in the Development of Industry in Cities
Tali Hatuka, Eran Ben-Joseph and Sunny Menozzi Peterson - Publication Reviews