Prags Boulevard in Copenhagen : from run-down strip to boulevard


Autoria(s): Raxworthy, Julian R.
Data(s)

01/02/2007

Resumo

Prags Boulevard will form a 2km long pedestrian spine running east-west between the historic cities of Copenhagen and Amager. It is located on a some-what run down site, which accommodated illicit functions such as casual drug use and drinking, as well as sheds for squatters. The renovation of this site by the city of Copenhagen forms part of the Holmbladsgade renovation project, and a two-phase competition was held in 2001 to develop a green area and meeting place, transforming it into a place that residents would want to visit rather than avoid. The designer, local landscape architect Kristine Jensens recognises that though the site is linear it ‘has no traffic importance’, though as she notes ‘we like the project because it runs straight east west from the city pulse to the water of Oresund’. In developing the project, she has attempted to allow it to ‘run parallel’ to its existing illicit uses, using a ‘light touch’ of insertions. While it would be hard to describe the project as truly light in its touch (graphically, it is a very bold scheme), there is no doubt that it is parallel: in terms of use it runs alongside rather than against existing uses; in terms of its type it’s all about length, like a boulevard, although it clearly differs from a boulevard in other respects.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/28004/

Publicador

Stichting Lijn in Landschap

Relação

DOI:10.1007/978-3-7643-8422-7_13

Raxworthy, Julian R. (2007) Prags Boulevard in Copenhagen : from run-down strip to boulevard. 'scape, 2007(2), pp. 69-72.

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; School of Design

Palavras-Chave #120107 Landscape Architecture #landscape architecture
Tipo

Journal Article