Abstract
As the industrial structure rapidly changed, the buildings and facilities at the helm of the previous industrialization era lost their original functions and became idle. These spaces contain elements of local history, culture, and time and provide the basis for this study. Therefore, it focuses on the role of a city’s sustainable media if they are converted to fit the city’s social and local context. In this study, we examine sustainable regeneration by adopting the methodology of the “new directions in planning theory” method, which means a contradictory approach to the sustainable values of long-standing industrial heritages from both physical and cognitive perspectives. We argue that its physical appearance, landscaping, and tectonic relation, composed of a specific spectrum of time accumulation, help people experience a sense of collective memory. In this way, a sense of time and place are embedded in materiality and are important to consider when moving toward urban sustainability. Our findings have implications for a new perspective on concrete regeneration strategies.
Highlights
As the industrial structure changed and the de-industrialization and informatization era arrived, industrial facilities centered on secondary industries—which were essential for economic development in the previous industrialization era—lost their original functions and became idle
Time accumulation can lead to a new heritage
Such a priority will enrich citizens’ urban experience, but play a role in raising cities’ heritage value from an environmental, social, and economic perspective
Summary
As the industrial structure changed and the de-industrialization and informatization era arrived, industrial facilities centered on secondary industries—which were essential for economic development in the previous industrialization era—lost their original functions and became idle In many cities, these idle industrial facilities are left unattended, making them desolate. It is necessary to look at such idle industrial facilities in various ways, rather than as exhausted inventory The reason for this is that there is potential for historical and socio-cultural values that have formed and accumulated over long periods of economic and social play within the community. In Korea, architectural movements have been happening since 2010, focusing on the value of industrial heritage with a sense of urban rebirth [1].
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