Garden City in Interwar Serbia: From England via Russia
Аутори
Vuksanović-Macura, ZlataОстала ауторства
Gordin, Aleksey AleksandrovichRastović, Aleksandar
Конференцијски прилог (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
This article examines the impact of the authors of Russian origin in applying the concept of a garden city in interwar Serbia in response to rapid urbanisation and uncontrolled urban growth of many Serbian cities. After the Revolution in 1917, about 250 architects and civil engineers immigrated to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia from Russia and got actively involved in design and construction work in their adopted homeland. Some played an essential role in urban planning practice in Serbia. To explain their contribution, examples of planned and realised garden-city-type neighbourhoods in two cities, Belgrade, the capital of Yugoslavia, and Kragujevac, the centre of military industry in middle Serbia, are analysed. By examining unpublished archives documents, original urban plans and the little-known book Big City and Garden-cities (Большoй городь и города-сады) by George Pavlovich Kovalevsky, this paper aims to set new directions for critical research on knowledge transfer in urban planning ...theory and practice between Russia and Serbia.
Кључне речи:
Garden city / garden suburbs / Serbia / Russian architects / George Pavlovich Kovalevsky / Nikolay Aleksandrovich Zhitkevich / Ђорђе Павлович Коваљевски / Николај Александревић Житкевић / Belgrade / KragujevacИзвор:
Urbanization in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. Collection of Articles of the II International Scientific Conference, 2021, 40-45Издавач:
- Nizhny Novgorod : State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering
- Belgrade : Institute of History
Финансирање / пројекти:
Институција/група
Географски институт „Јован Цвијић“ САНУ / Geographical Institute Jovan Cvijić SASATY - CONF AU - Vuksanović-Macura, Zlata PY - 2021 UR - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/15187 AB - This article examines the impact of the authors of Russian origin in applying the concept of a garden city in interwar Serbia in response to rapid urbanisation and uncontrolled urban growth of many Serbian cities. After the Revolution in 1917, about 250 architects and civil engineers immigrated to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia from Russia and got actively involved in design and construction work in their adopted homeland. Some played an essential role in urban planning practice in Serbia. To explain their contribution, examples of planned and realised garden-city-type neighbourhoods in two cities, Belgrade, the capital of Yugoslavia, and Kragujevac, the centre of military industry in middle Serbia, are analysed. By examining unpublished archives documents, original urban plans and the little-known book Big City and Garden-cities (Большoй городь и города-сады) by George Pavlovich Kovalevsky, this paper aims to set new directions for critical research on knowledge transfer in urban planning theory and practice between Russia and Serbia. PB - Nizhny Novgorod : State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering PB - Belgrade : Institute of History C3 - Urbanization in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. Collection of Articles of the II International Scientific Conference T1 - Garden City in Interwar Serbia: From England via Russia SP - 40 EP - 45 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15187 ER -
@conference{ author = "Vuksanović-Macura, Zlata", year = "2021", abstract = "This article examines the impact of the authors of Russian origin in applying the concept of a garden city in interwar Serbia in response to rapid urbanisation and uncontrolled urban growth of many Serbian cities. After the Revolution in 1917, about 250 architects and civil engineers immigrated to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia from Russia and got actively involved in design and construction work in their adopted homeland. Some played an essential role in urban planning practice in Serbia. To explain their contribution, examples of planned and realised garden-city-type neighbourhoods in two cities, Belgrade, the capital of Yugoslavia, and Kragujevac, the centre of military industry in middle Serbia, are analysed. By examining unpublished archives documents, original urban plans and the little-known book Big City and Garden-cities (Большoй городь и города-сады) by George Pavlovich Kovalevsky, this paper aims to set new directions for critical research on knowledge transfer in urban planning theory and practice between Russia and Serbia.", publisher = "Nizhny Novgorod : State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering, Belgrade : Institute of History", journal = "Urbanization in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. Collection of Articles of the II International Scientific Conference", title = "Garden City in Interwar Serbia: From England via Russia", pages = "40-45", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15187" }
Vuksanović-Macura, Z.. (2021). Garden City in Interwar Serbia: From England via Russia. in Urbanization in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. Collection of Articles of the II International Scientific Conference Nizhny Novgorod : State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering., 40-45. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15187
Vuksanović-Macura Z. Garden City in Interwar Serbia: From England via Russia. in Urbanization in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. Collection of Articles of the II International Scientific Conference. 2021;:40-45. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15187 .
Vuksanović-Macura, Zlata, "Garden City in Interwar Serbia: From England via Russia" in Urbanization in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe. Collection of Articles of the II International Scientific Conference (2021):40-45, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15187 .