Abstract

The following article presents the issue of the fortification of Riga and associated plans of the suburbs in the 17th and 18th centuries (plans of Johann van Rodenburg and Rudolf Friedrich Härbel), as well as the projects of the transformation of the former fortification zones in the 19th century. Additionally, the paper covers the question of an unknown plan of Riga from 1843. In 1812, as a result of an intentional arson during the Russian campaign, the suburbs were completely destroyed. This prompted Filippo Paulucci to create a new plan that, among others, carefully delineated the transformation of the glacis into a wide esplanade. In 1856, after the Crimean War, a decision was made to de-fortify the city. In November 1857, in a very solemn manner, the process of Riga’s defortification began. Torch -bearing citizens participated in marches across the city, taking part in concerts and collective singing; during all these festivities, the city was brightly illuminated. This event was an amalgamation of solemn state celebrations and a folk, carnival-like fiesta. Celebrations connected with the process of Riga’s defortification belong to a small group of defortifications in European cities celebrated so uproariously.
 In early 1857, the architect Johann Daniel Felsko created a remarkably interesting plan developing the former fortification grounds, as well as a new idea of the spatial development of the city. Felsko used the modern division into functional zones: the trading-communication zone (port, depots, railway station, and ‘gostiny dvor’ (‘merchant yard’) and the stately-park zone (palaces, elegant revenue houses, public buildings), which, at that time, was still a great rarity. The conception utilized in Riga definitely overtook the ideas for the Vienna Ring Road (the second half of 1857). In my opinion, Felsko’s idea shares the most similarities with the former fortification zones in Frankfurt am Main, which were reclaimed in 1806. However, his plan was never faithfully realized.
 Out of numerous projects concerning the esplanade and promenade on the grounds of the former glacis, in the second half of the 19th century, there emerged one of the most interesting and beautiful European promenade complexes. Some of the first public buildings were the Riga-Daugavpils Railway Station and the theatre; later, school buildings, the Riga Technical University, and numerous palaces and houses were erected there. In the early 20th century, Riga was the third biggest and industrially developed city east of the Oder, reaching the population of over 470,000 citizens in 1913, following Warsaw and Wrocław. Its spatial development ideas, created in the 19th century, were then fully implemented.

Highlights

  • Niniejszy artykuł poświęcony jest forty kowaniu Rygi w XVII i XVIII w. i związanym z tym planom przedmieść oraz rozbiórce murów i nowej koncepcji rozwoju przestrzennego miasta

  • Tworzył go wysoki mur opasujący miasto także od strony Dźwiny i portu[5]

  • Przewidywał on pozostawienie glacis przed umocnieniami miasta lokacyjnego i połączenie go z regularną esplanadą o szerokości około 400 m

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Summary

Introduction

Niniejszy artykuł poświęcony jest forty kowaniu Rygi w XVII i XVIII w. i związanym z tym planom przedmieść oraz rozbiórce murów i nowej koncepcji rozwoju przestrzennego miasta. Działania te nie przełożyły się jednak na stworzenie reprezentacyjnego założenia, a przekształcenie miasta około połowy XIX w. Widok od strony Dźwiny, około 1640, Herder Institut Marburg, Kartensammlung sygn.

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