Display candidate transaction variables for article
Id | 740 | |
Author | Vardopoulos I., Stamopoulos C., Chatzithanasis G., Michalakelis C., Giannouli P., Pastrapa E. | |
Title | Considering urban development paths and processes on account of adaptive reuse projects | |
Reference | Vardopoulos I., Stamopoulos C., Chatzithanasis G., Michalakelis C., Giannouli P., Pastrapa E.; Considering urban development paths and processes on account of adaptive reuse projects ;Buildings vol:10.0 issue: 4.0 page: |
Link to article | https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85084631986&doi=10.3390%2fBUILDINGS10040073&partnerID=40&md5=222386a665a05c8c5738adad8edce7a1 |
Abstract | This article, as part of the SUMcity research program, aims to give a comprehensive account of the regeneration that occurred in Athens by the adaptive reuse of the old FIX Brewery to house the new Hellenic National Museum of Contemporary Art (EMST). Adaptive reuse is an urban sustainability development evolving process, used to manage assets and resources efficiently, resulting in economic development, increased local attraction, and revitalized community engagement. Other than that, modern societies experience the dynamic stream of social media and smart city initiatives, amid a long-discussed and complex cultural heritage preservation backdrop. Notwithstanding the value added to the city, the interaction of sustainable development with adaptive reuse projects, culture, tourism, social media use, and smart city initiatives, along with the impact of this intangible relationship, has yet to be set in a more tangible form. Methodologically, a newly developed conceptual framework is used in order to re-define the (cor)relations among the existent concepts of sustainable development, smart city and cultural heritage. Subsequently, a primary questionnaire-based research is conducted on Instagram users geotagging the Hellenic National Museum of Contemporary Art (EMST), analyzing their views in an attempt to demonstrate the arising local potential and sustainability. © 2020 by the authors. |
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More broadly, findings from the current research could be valuable to decision-makers and involved stakeholders aiming to achieve successful sustainable urban development. . | Future cities should urban communi ies committed to improving the well-being of the current and future residents, integrating economic, environmental, social and cultural considerations. . | Adaptive reuse is an urban sustainability development evolving process, used to manage assets and resources efficiently, resulting in economic development, increased local attraction, and revitalized community engagement. . | They are used, intentionally and unintentionally, as a means of mobilizing communities, by defining specific city locations (GeoTagg) as places that provide an encouraging socially unifying channel for community involvement. . | Since the cultural heritage buildings are rooted into the citys identity as (mostly) part of the urban landscape, adaptive reuse can strengthen the communitys sense of belonging by positively linking the citys past with the future, offering, at the same time, some of the most astonishing buildings to be used for the emerging city needs, a process which can, overall, spark wholesome urban renewal processes 10 . . | Seen as a prime example of an evolving cultural heritage conservation process applying the principles of economic, environmental, and social sustainability, and used in order to manage mainly cultural heritage assets and resources efficiently, the interaction with social media use, and smart city initiatives are examined. . | Therefore, public understanding and engagement (participatory and interactive) with digital cultural data is considered to be particularly important. . |