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Urbani izziv Volume 13, No. 2, December 2002 : 82–89

(Presentations)
doi: 10.5379/urbani-izziv-en-2002-13-02-011

 

   Article in PDF format

 

Author

Tadeja ZUPANČIČ STROJAN

University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Architecture, Ljubljana, Slovenia
tadeja.zupancic@fa.uni-lj.si

Martina ZBAŠNIK – SENEGAČNIK

University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Architecture, Ljubljana, Slovenia
martina.zbasnik@fa.uni-lj.si

Tomaž NOVLJAN

University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Architecture, Ljubljana, Slovenia
tomaz.novljan@fa.uni-lj.si

Alenka FIKFAK

University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Architecture, Ljubljana, Slovenia
alenka.fikfak@fa.uni-lj.si

 

Title

Presentations

 

Abstract

“Degraded” housing areas represent a 9% share of urbanised surfaces of thirty-five in planning terms recently researched Slovenian towns. Above all social housing estates built between 1945 and 1965 present issues since they are isolated, poorly maintained, and cannot reach modern standards. The research contemplates the redirecting of the present abstract planning rationales to the real architectural, user level. Further intentions of the research are to consolidate ideas about the urgency of renewal as the only possible method of solving problems of a certain pattern of building, to determine criteria and measures for renewal and to determine rational or real directions for concrete contributions for the improvement of the standard of living, in short, to a new shift in living culture discussed settlement pattern.

 

Key Words

architecture, rehabilitation, residential area, Slovenia

 

 

 

PUBLISHER

Urbanistični inštitut RS
Urbani izziv - Editorial Board
Trnovski pristan 2, 1000 Ljubljana, SLO

  + 386 (0)1 420 13 10
  urbani.izziv@uirs.si

ISSN

Print edition: 0353-6483
Web edition: 1855-8399
Professional edition: 2232-481X

INDEX

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h5-index: 14
h5-median: 20
INDEX COPERNICUS
ICI Journals master list 2022: 121,34
CLARIVATE ANALYTICS
Indeksirano v ESCI

 

SCOPUS ELSEVIER

SCImago Journal & Country Rank

1.7
2021CiteScore
 
88th percentile
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SNIP (2020): 0.79
CiteScoreTracker (2022): 1.8

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