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The Transformation of Dorćol Power Plant: Triggering a Sustainable Urban Regeneration or Selling the Heritage?
The power plant “Power and Light” (1932, Belgrade) was the first one to generate alternating current in Serbia. Situated along the Danube river, it represented a part of an industrial area positioned in the Dorćol neighborhood, close to the urban core. Since 2005, the whole area has been exposed to...
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Published in: | Sustainability 2022-01, Vol.14 (1), p.523 |
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creator | Simic, Ivan Stupar, Aleksandra Grujicic, Aleksandar Mihajlov, Vladimir Cvetkovic, Marija |
description | The power plant “Power and Light” (1932, Belgrade) was the first one to generate alternating current in Serbia. Situated along the Danube river, it represented a part of an industrial area positioned in the Dorćol neighborhood, close to the urban core. Since 2005, the whole area has been exposed to a significant transformation into a luxurious residential and commercial complex, triggered by the intentions of private investors and directed by the ideas of changing city authorities. Considering the unpredictable local context created by the dominant post-socialist transitional economy, the article focuses on the sensitive relationship between the social sustainability of the ongoing urban regeneration plans and the emerging neoliberal forces targeting the areas of industrial heritage. Consequently, the case of the Dorćol ex-power plant and the anticipated changes in its urban surrounding are analyzed according to the selected principles of social sustainability. Revealing numerous controversies, both on the level of preferred urban policies and their questionable application, this case addresses the problems of heritage (re)use and regeneration in an environment of fast-shifting governmental priorities and financial flows, with reduced receptivity to sustainable solutions. |
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subjects | Architecture Community Cultural heritage Cultural identity Decision making Electric power-plants Environmental aspects Industrial areas Management Methods Neighborhoods Neoliberalism Participation Power plants Privatization Public services Sustainability Sustainable urban development Urban planning Urban policy Urban regeneration Urban renewal Urbanization |
title | The Transformation of Dorćol Power Plant: Triggering a Sustainable Urban Regeneration or Selling the Heritage? |
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