The Development Mode of the Livable Environment Construction of Shenyang Tiexi Old Industrial Relocation Zone

2014 ◽  
Vol 908 ◽  
pp. 379-382
Author(s):  
Wei Cheng ◽  
Li Juan Chai ◽  
Cheng Cheng

This article makes some basic analysis of the liable environment construction of industrial city and explores the development patterns of the livable environment construction of Shenyang Tiexi old industrial relocation zone, which can provide ideas and references for other old industrial cities to realize the goal of the livable environment construction.

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 249-253
Author(s):  
Menghan Jin

Jinan City, Shandong Province, is one of the important cities in modern industrial production and development in China. It plays an important role in the industrial history of modern China and has a very rich industrial cultural heritage. Hefei City, Anhui Province, from a small city, through reform and innovation, has become a rising star of Chinese cities, with per capita GDP approaching Jinan. In this paper, the single variable time series prediction model based on LSTM is used to fit the Area GDP of Jinan and Hefei in 31 years from 1990 to 2020, and the Area GDP data of the two cities in the next three years is predicted. Finally, combined with the development of foreign old industrial cities, this paper puts forward some suggestions for the future development of Jinan.


2019 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 75-90 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emilia Jaroszewska

Abstract The industry which was a driving force of the economy and contributed to the population growth in many cities for decades became later the source of their problems. The crisis of the activity of old industrial cities creating the economic base (especially of the traditional industry), provoked by the deindustrialisation process and in post-socialist countries additionally by the “shock” of the economic transformation, caused long-lasting and unfavourable changes in many areas. It resulted in the present process of shrinkage of old industrial cities in demographic, economic, social aspects as well as spatial ones (Bontje 2004; Oswalt 2005; Turok, Mykhnenko 2007; Pallagst et al. 2009; Cunningham-Sabot et al. 2010; Bontje, Musterd 2012; Hospers 2012, 2014; Haase et al. 2013; Pallagst et al. 2014; Stryjakiewicz 2014; Runge et al. 2018). This process can take a different course in different socio-economic patterns depending on the geographical situation and the time of observation. However, it leads to unfavourable results in each place, first of all to a decrease in the number of inhabitants. The aim of the article is twofold: (1) the identification and analysis of the process of urban shrinkage of Wałbrzych city as well as (2) the examination of different regeneration strategies adopted to mitigate negative effects of urban shrinkage. It is particularly important to understand this process and results of the adopted strategies especially in the context of the future development of this city which according to demographic forecasts will be shrinking in the long run.


Author(s):  
Michael Nevell

This chapter provides an overview of one of the most significant nineteenth-century industrial cities: Manchester. It reviews the seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century background to the emergence of the nineteenth-century industrial city: weak local lordship and the concentration of commercial power in a small group of entrepreneurial textile families. What emerged was a template for the industrial city: an urban-based textile manufacturing centre with dedicated workers’ housing serviced by a detailed and efficient transport network. This model would be copied by cities in Europe and North America during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The outline of the nineteenth-century industrial city is described through its archaeology, in the form of standing structures and excavated evidence. This includes the canal and railway infrastructure, the excavation of workers’ housing and the recording of surviving workshop dwellings, and the survey and excavation of Manchester’s most important manufacturing type-site: the steam-powered cotton spinning mill.


2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 2525-2528 ◽  
Author(s):  
Li Jing Dong

The industrial transformation of old industrial cities is attributed to the result of the mutual effect of two important elements which contain social macroeconomic policies and economic stimulus. Macro social policy is the fundamental reason, which determines the inevitability of industrial transformative occurrence and development. Economic stimulus is a direct factor, which is also a direct cause induced transformation. The two elements interact and promote each other to form the industrial transformation mechanism.


2013 ◽  
Vol 639-640 ◽  
pp. 952-956
Author(s):  
Jin Zhou ◽  
Wan Min Zhao

The disasters in mountainous cities are serious and special, which have wide distribution range and whose relative factors are fuzzy and complicated. So, in mountainous industrial cities it should pay more attention to prevent and reduce disasters especially. The article takes mountainous city Changshou District of Chongqing as an example, which is also the typical heavy chemical industrial city, to discuss the planning strategies of preventing and reducing disasters for heavy chemical industrial city in the complex mountainous topographical conditions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2 (119) ◽  
pp. 144-150
Author(s):  
Elena Y. Burlina ◽  

«Bezymyanka» is the name of the largest industrial district of the city of Kuibyshev, now Samara. The expressive name can also be interpreted as a metaphor for many industrial cities of the Soviet era. In the XXI century various projects for the transformation of industrial cities are known. The cultural capital of Europe in 2007 was the oldest mining city in Germany, Essen, together with nearby industrial ancient mining towns in the Ruhr River Valley. The project was won by solving environmental problems and creative reformatting of the industrial city. It should be noted that the problems of Soviet industrial cities are presented in numerous Russian and foreign studies. So, the article refers to modern works on the search for justified transformations of «Soviet Magnitka»; Uralmash in Ekaterinburg and other problematic industrial cities. The purpose of this article is to draw attention to various interpretations of such cities. In Samara, there is also «bifurcation»: the old city and industrial Bezymyanka. To expose the sociocultural contradiction between the «old» and the «industrial city», the article reveals discrepancies that inhibit development. The author draws attention to the unique and overtaken by its time Grushinsky festival, in particular, its leaders. Conclusion: the lack of the balance of «old», «Soviet» and «post-Soviet» territories inside of one city is a problem of lack of personalities.


2020 ◽  
Vol 194 ◽  
pp. 05045
Author(s):  
Zhiyuan Xie ◽  
Ying Huang ◽  
Xinghua Hu

Plant landscape is an indispensable part of the city. Regional plant landscape not only has excellent ecological benefits, but also can better show the regional characteristics and human culture of the city. Through the analysis of plant landscape in the industrial city, it is concluded that how to make better use of plants to create urban plant landscape with regional characteristics is the focus of regional plant landscape construction.


Author(s):  
E.Ya. Burlina ◽  

The relevance of research. In 2007, the industrial city of Essen, Germany, and the accompanying "ring" of mining towns in the Ruhr Valley, quite unexpectedly became the European Capital of Culture. Essen did not lose in a number of such senior cities as Athens and Florence, world centers like Paris, Amsterdam, Brussels. On the contrary, the project of an industrial city has generated creative interest. The aim of the project was to solve such problems of industrial cities as the ecology of an industrial city, monuments of factory culture. The core of the project was mining biographies and the memory of the profession. The article provides links to similar transformations of the "Soviet Magnitka" - Uralmash in Yekaterinburg and other industrial cities of Russia. The “case of Samara” is considered in most 62 Гуманитарные науки Humanitarian Sciences ________________________________________________________________________________________________ detail. The author's hypothesis is that there is a rift in Samara between the "old" and "industrial city". This is confirmed by the analysis of chronotopes of different parts of the city and the proposed hypothesis of urban archetypes. Research methodology. The article uses the analysis of biographies and the go-along method. The author's concept of the chronotopic fault of the city became the substantive basis of this article. The cultural projects that the industrial "Bezymyanka" gave birth to give a high assessment of their projectivity, which has outstripped its time. Among the "nameless cultural projects" there is a unique mathematical and aesthetic school, a competition for young musicians named after D. B. Kabalevsky, the Valery Grushin International Festival is the world's largest festival of art songs. The city needed creative projects and it deserves study and further development. Conclusion: the problem of different cultural territories within one city inevitably leads to the division of territories and the inhibition of the creative development of the city as a whole.


2014 ◽  
Vol 962-965 ◽  
pp. 2529-2532
Author(s):  
Li Jing Dong

The Innovation factors of industrial transformation in the old industrial cities contain traditional system reform, Technology upgrading and transformation and cultural ideas change. Traditional system reform is the fundamental reason, which determines the inevitability of industrial transformative occurrence and development. Technology upgrading and transformation is a direct factor, which is also a direct cause induced transformation. Changing cultural ideas is the transformative condition which urge the root cause to work. The three elements interact and promote each other to form the industrial transformation mechanism.


GeoScape ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vojtěch Bosák ◽  
Alexandr Nováček ◽  
Ondřej Slach

Abstract Old industrial cities abound with extensive infrastructures, which however no longer suit the economic purposes, for which they were originally built. However either their demolition or a complete rebuilding of new is often not a viable option, and thus the issue of their smart reuse emerged in urban studies. In this paper we combine literature on restructuring, brownfields, and industrial heritage to assess their significance both as a barrier and asset for future urban development. The main aim is to provide municipalities with an overview of the range of their possible reuses, and problems they might face in doing so. Furthermore, the selected examples show that contemplating new use should be guided by assessment of intrinsic features of the structures on one hand, and by general global trends on other. This new combination of the two might render the new use competitive. For this sake a case study of the old industrial city of Ostrava is employed, as this issue has been particularly pronounced given the city’s strong historical specialisation in heavy industry.


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