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Industrial legacy towards brownfields: historical and current specifics, territorial differences (Czech Republic)
- 1.0494409 - ÚGN 2019 RIV SK eng J - Journal Article
Kunc, J. - Tonev, P. - Martinát, Stanislav - Frantál, Bohumil - Klusáček, Petr - Dvořák, Z. - Chaloupková, M. - Jaňurová, M. - Krajčíková, A. - Šilhan, Z.
Industrial legacy towards brownfields: historical and current specifics, territorial differences (Czech Republic).
Geographia Cassoviensis. Roč. 12, č. 1 (2018), s. 76-91. ISSN 1337-6748. E-ISSN 2454-0005
R&D Projects: GA ČR(CZ) GA17-26934S
Institutional support: RVO:68145535
Keywords : industrial heritage * brownfields * Czech Republic
OECD category: Cultural and economic geography
https://geografia.science.upjs.sk/images/geographia_cassoviensis/articles/GC-2018-12-1/2018_1_Kunc_et_al.pdf
Industrial tradition in the Czech Republic spans across the last two centuries, it has established deep roots, and the significance of industry in the contemporary national economy is virtually irreplaceable. Industrial brownfields originated along with the first industrial estates in the 19th century but brownfields as an independent object of study came into focus among political representatives and scientists only in the second half of the 1990s. This article describes the most remarkable milestones of the industrial expansion on the territory of the Czech Republic focusing on: several peaks of capitalist booms during the era of the Habsburg monarchy and of independent Czechoslovakia before the World War II, the following period of socialist industrializationm, the economic transformation period after 1989. These historical milestones exerted decisive influence on shaping the spatial mosaic and the current concentrations of old and vacant locations of past industrial production. Using large data sets and graphic outputs, the article discusses the issues of industry and brownfields from the viewpoints of time, space (territory-specific), and industrial branches. The final section notes brownfields' reflections in the cultural landscape and the options of their regeneration.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0287611
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