Autoři
Salahieh, D. - Tobišková, K., - Koucká, M.
Publikováno v
In: 15th Architecture in Perspective/ 15. Architektura v perspektivě. Ostrava: Vysoká škola báňská - Technická univerzita v Ostravě, 2024. p. 79-87. ISBN 978-80-248-4711-5.
Rok
2024
Související lidé
Ústav
Anotace
In the "Czech Republic 2030 Vision” document, published in 2017 by the Department for Sustainable Development at the Czech Republic Government Office, urban resilience was a prioritized parameter for assessing urban capacity to mitigate vulnerabilities to socioeconomic and environmental perturbations. However, efforts to assess and reflect on the measures and conditions of urban resilience are somewhat lacking in the Czech context. In retrospect, this paper aims to review the resilience of a distinct inner-city neighborhood in the city of Prague: Prague-Smíchov. Methodologically, the paper begins with a review of the strategies and implementation plans for urban resilience in Prague and Smíchov's municipality, followed by a historical reading of the area's urban development and adaptability to turbulences and changes. Finally, the paper unveils a preliminary examination of Smíchov’s central area contemporary urban conditions in conjunction with the walkability of its public spaces and vitality of its blue-green infrastructure. The paper highlights the need for further research to address and enhance the scope of urban resilience within the city of Prague.
Autoři
Salahieh, D. - Zibar, L., - Fialová, I.
Publikováno v
In: IN-PRESENCE / THE BODY AND THE SPACE The role of corporeity in the era of virtualization. PUBLICA, 2024. p. 53-55. ISBN 9788899586409.
Rok
2024
Související lidé
Ústav
Anotace
This paper explores a body-centered approach to understanding walkability, emphasizing walking as a sensory, spatial, and symbolic experience rather than merely a mode of mobility. Moving past conventional metrics that taper walkability to physical infrastructure, it reviews narrative and embodied research methods to examine how urban environments are perceived and experienced in relation to walkability. Using Prague as a case study, this paper underscores the importance of an expanded, experiential perspective—one that recognizes the complex interactions between bodily presence, spatial form, and urban atmosphere. It advocates for methodologies that engage with the lived, sensory dimensions of walking to more fully understand how walkability is shaped and experienced.