9783798332775.pdf

The negative effects of private motorized transport on cities, including the high land consumption for parking space, are now well known. Departing from the assumption that private car ownership must decrease and thus parking space will be liberated for other uses in the future, this bachelor thesis...

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Γλώσσα:German
Έκδοση: Universitätsverlag der Technischen Universität Berlin 2023
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://verlag.tu-berlin.de/produkt/978-3-7983-3277-5/
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spelling oapen-20.500.12657-622492024-03-27T14:14:48Z Aus Parkraum einen sozialen und ökologischen Mehrwert schöpfen? Ansätze für Umprogrammierungen am Beispiel von Parkhäusern Wanner Fandrych, Sophie parking car park reprogramming conversion car-friendly city thema EDItEUR::R Earth Sciences, Geography, Environment, Planning::RP Regional and area planning::RPC Urban and municipal planning and policy The negative effects of private motorized transport on cities, including the high land consumption for parking space, are now well known. Departing from the assumption that private car ownership must decrease and thus parking space will be liberated for other uses in the future, this bachelor thesis looks at how multi-story car parks as one type of parking space and an existing 'hardware' of the city can be reprogrammed for uses with a social and ecological added value. Following research on the history of parking and the role of car parks in German cities to date, selected experts were interviewed. Based on their assessment of the possibilities and limitations of these buildings for other uses, three scenarios for the reprogramming of multi-story car parks were developed. Each scenario is set in different hypothetical circumstances and proposes a particular focus, considering the interests of different stakeholders and suggesting instruments that might render conflicting interests compatible. The scenarios outline a flexible approach, informed by temporary and experimental uses which may evolve as societal demands change. They show how car parks can be employed to facilitate the transition to more sustainable urban mobility and how, as multifunctional entities, they could make a contribution to more walkable cities. The thesis suggests that car parks hold a potential for cities that has not yet been widely recognized and encourages that strategies for its realization be tested. 2023-04-04T10:04:48Z 2023-04-04T10:04:48Z 2023 book ONIX_20230404_9783798332775_2 2751-7977 9783798332775 https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/62249 ger ISR Impulse application/pdf Attribution 4.0 International 9783798332775.pdf https://verlag.tu-berlin.de/produkt/978-3-7983-3277-5/ Universitätsverlag der Technischen Universität Berlin 10.14279/depositonce-16733 The negative effects of private motorized transport on cities, including the high land consumption for parking space, are now well known. Departing from the assumption that private car ownership must decrease and thus parking space will be liberated for other uses in the future, this bachelor thesis looks at how multi-story car parks as one type of parking space and an existing 'hardware' of the city can be reprogrammed for uses with a social and ecological added value. Following research on the history of parking and the role of car parks in German cities to date, selected experts were interviewed. Based on their assessment of the possibilities and limitations of these buildings for other uses, three scenarios for the reprogramming of multi-story car parks were developed. Each scenario is set in different hypothetical circumstances and proposes a particular focus, considering the interests of different stakeholders and suggesting instruments that might render conflicting interests compatible. The scenarios outline a flexible approach, informed by temporary and experimental uses which may evolve as societal demands change. They show how car parks can be employed to facilitate the transition to more sustainable urban mobility and how, as multifunctional entities, they could make a contribution to more walkable cities. The thesis suggests that car parks hold a potential for cities that has not yet been widely recognized and encourages that strategies for its realization be tested. 10.14279/depositonce-16733 e5e3d993-eb32-46aa-8ee9-b5f168659224 9783798332775 72 78 Berlin open access
institution OAPEN
collection DSpace
language German
description The negative effects of private motorized transport on cities, including the high land consumption for parking space, are now well known. Departing from the assumption that private car ownership must decrease and thus parking space will be liberated for other uses in the future, this bachelor thesis looks at how multi-story car parks as one type of parking space and an existing 'hardware' of the city can be reprogrammed for uses with a social and ecological added value. Following research on the history of parking and the role of car parks in German cities to date, selected experts were interviewed. Based on their assessment of the possibilities and limitations of these buildings for other uses, three scenarios for the reprogramming of multi-story car parks were developed. Each scenario is set in different hypothetical circumstances and proposes a particular focus, considering the interests of different stakeholders and suggesting instruments that might render conflicting interests compatible. The scenarios outline a flexible approach, informed by temporary and experimental uses which may evolve as societal demands change. They show how car parks can be employed to facilitate the transition to more sustainable urban mobility and how, as multifunctional entities, they could make a contribution to more walkable cities. The thesis suggests that car parks hold a potential for cities that has not yet been widely recognized and encourages that strategies for its realization be tested.
title 9783798332775.pdf
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title_short 9783798332775.pdf
title_full 9783798332775.pdf
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title_full_unstemmed 9783798332775.pdf
title_sort 9783798332775.pdf
publisher Universitätsverlag der Technischen Universität Berlin
publishDate 2023
url https://verlag.tu-berlin.de/produkt/978-3-7983-3277-5/
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