- wa-ID
- wa-2033548
- Tag der Veröffentlichung
- 09.02.2022
- Aktualisiert am
- 25.11.2022
- Verfahrensart
- Award
- Zulassungsbereich
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EU /EWR
- Teilnehmer
- Architekt*innen, Stadtplaner*innen und Landschaftsarchitekt*innen
- Auslober
- Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB)
- Abgabetermin
- 17.05.2022
- Bekanntgabe
- 15.11.2022
Spanien 10/1 Gestaltung von Straßen und Plätzen, Fußgängerzonen
10 Verkehr
15/2 Gestaltung von Straßen und Plätzen, Fußgängerzonen
15 Landschaftsarchitektur
Award
Vielen Dank für Ihre Nachricht
Gewinner | Winner
Project: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands.
Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect
Developer: Gemeente Utrecht
Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect
Developer: Gemeente Utrecht
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Image: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
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Gewinner | Winner: Catharijnesingel, 2020. Utrecht, Netherlands. | Author: OKRA landschapsarchitect | Developer: Gemeente Utrecht | Photo: © 2021 OKRA landschapsarchitecten
Finalist
Project: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium.
POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters
POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | © POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
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Finalist: FLOW, 2021. Brussels, Belgium. | POOL IS COOL, Decoratelier Jozef Wouters | Photo: © 2021 Paul Steinbrück
Finalist
Project: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden.
Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | © Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers | Photo: © 2021 Geir Brendeland
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | © Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | © Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | © Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | © Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
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Finalist: Hage, 2021. Lund, Sweden. | © Brendeland & Kristoffersen architects, Price & Myers
Finalist
Project: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France.
Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU
Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | © Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
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Finalist: Saint Sernin Square, 2020. Toulouse, France. | Joan Busquets, Pieter-Jan Versluys, BAU | Photo: © 2020 BAU
Finalist
Project: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia.
Artilērijas dārzi
Artilērijas dārzi
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
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Finalist: “Sporta pils dārzi” urban garden in Riga, 2021. Riga, Latvia. | Artilērijas dārzi | Photo: © 2021 Kristīne Majare
Verfahrensart
Award / Auszeichnung
Wettbewerbsaufgabe
Das CCCB gibt die Ausschreibung für den European Prize for Urban Public Space bekannt, eine erstklassige Beobachtungsstelle für europäische Städte, die die besten Arbeiten zur Schaffung, Wiederherstellung, Umgestaltung und Verbesserung öffentlicher Räume in Europa auszeichnet.
Veranstaltet von der CCCB, wird der Preis von einem Netzwerk aus 10 Architektur- und Stadtplanungszentren und über 50 Experten aus dem ganzen Kontinent organisiert.
Der Preis, der einzige seiner Art in Europa, wurde erneuert, um die Debatte über die Zukunft der europäischen Städte im Kontext der Post-Pandemie zu fördern.
Das Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB) schreibt den elften European Prize for Urban Public Space aus. Mit diesem alle zwei Jahre stattfindenden Wettbewerb, der seit dem Jahr 2000 die besten Interventionen zur Schaffung, Umgestaltung und Wiederherstellung öffentlicher Räume in europäischen Städten auszeichnet, werden Arbeiten ausgezeichnet, die zwischen 2018 und 2021 durchgeführt werden.
In einem Kontext wie dem heutigen, in dem der Klimanotstand und die durch die COVID-19-Pandemie ausgelöste Krise zeigen, dass Städte auf der ganzen Welt vor neuen klimatischen, technologischen und sozialen Herausforderungen stehen, ist der Wert des öffentlichen Raums größer denn je.
Der Preis, der einzige in Europa, der dem öffentlichen Raum gewidmet ist und sowohl an die Verfasser des Projekts als auch an seine Entwickler verliehen wird, soll die zentrale Bedeutung dieser Fragen widerspiegeln und zu einer Beobachtungsstelle für bewährte Praktiken werden, die dazu dient, mögliche Lösungen für eine Zukunft zu finden, in der die Städte eine Hauptrolle bei der Gestaltung der gesellschaftlichen Entwicklung spielen werden.
Competition asisgnment
The CCCB is announcing the call for the European Prize for Urban Public Space, a prime observatory of European cities that recognizes the best works to create, recover, transform and improve public spaces in Europe.
Promoted by the CCCB, the Prize is organized by a network of 10 architecture and urban planning centres, and over 50 experts from across the continent.
The Prize, the only one of its kind in Europe, has been renewed to promote debate about the future of European cities in the post-pandemic context.
The Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB) announces the eleventh European Prize for Urban Public Space. This biennial honorary contest, since 2000 acknowledging the best interventions to create, transform and recover public spaces in European cities, will recognise works carried out between 2018 and 2021.
In a context like today’s, where climate emergency and the crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemic show that cities around the world are facing new climatic, technological and social challenges, the value of public space is greater than ever.
The Prize, which is the only one in Europe dedicated to public space and is awarded both to the authors of the project and its developers, aims to reflex the centrality of these issues and become an observatory of good practices that serves to come up with possible solutions to a future in which cities will have a primary role in defining society’s evolution.
Jury
Teresa Galí-Izard, Agricultural engineer, landscape designer and lecturer at the ETH Zurich (President of the jury)
Hans Ibelings, Dutch architecture critic and historian, editor of The Architecture Observer
Eleni Myrivili, Doctor of Anthropology, and Resilience and Sustainability advisor to Athens City Council
Andreas Ruby, Director of the Swiss Architecture Museum in Basel and co-founder of Ruby Press
Paloma Strelitz, British architect, creative director of Patch and founder of Assemble, London
Špela Videčnik, architect, founder member of OFIS architects, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Weitere Informationen zu dem Gewinner und den Finalisten finden Sie unter /
More information about the winner and finalists can be found at:
www.publicspace.org/the-prize/-/edition/2022/results
Award / Auszeichnung
Wettbewerbsaufgabe
Das CCCB gibt die Ausschreibung für den European Prize for Urban Public Space bekannt, eine erstklassige Beobachtungsstelle für europäische Städte, die die besten Arbeiten zur Schaffung, Wiederherstellung, Umgestaltung und Verbesserung öffentlicher Räume in Europa auszeichnet.
Veranstaltet von der CCCB, wird der Preis von einem Netzwerk aus 10 Architektur- und Stadtplanungszentren und über 50 Experten aus dem ganzen Kontinent organisiert.
Der Preis, der einzige seiner Art in Europa, wurde erneuert, um die Debatte über die Zukunft der europäischen Städte im Kontext der Post-Pandemie zu fördern.
Das Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB) schreibt den elften European Prize for Urban Public Space aus. Mit diesem alle zwei Jahre stattfindenden Wettbewerb, der seit dem Jahr 2000 die besten Interventionen zur Schaffung, Umgestaltung und Wiederherstellung öffentlicher Räume in europäischen Städten auszeichnet, werden Arbeiten ausgezeichnet, die zwischen 2018 und 2021 durchgeführt werden.
In einem Kontext wie dem heutigen, in dem der Klimanotstand und die durch die COVID-19-Pandemie ausgelöste Krise zeigen, dass Städte auf der ganzen Welt vor neuen klimatischen, technologischen und sozialen Herausforderungen stehen, ist der Wert des öffentlichen Raums größer denn je.
Der Preis, der einzige in Europa, der dem öffentlichen Raum gewidmet ist und sowohl an die Verfasser des Projekts als auch an seine Entwickler verliehen wird, soll die zentrale Bedeutung dieser Fragen widerspiegeln und zu einer Beobachtungsstelle für bewährte Praktiken werden, die dazu dient, mögliche Lösungen für eine Zukunft zu finden, in der die Städte eine Hauptrolle bei der Gestaltung der gesellschaftlichen Entwicklung spielen werden.
Competition asisgnment
The CCCB is announcing the call for the European Prize for Urban Public Space, a prime observatory of European cities that recognizes the best works to create, recover, transform and improve public spaces in Europe.
Promoted by the CCCB, the Prize is organized by a network of 10 architecture and urban planning centres, and over 50 experts from across the continent.
The Prize, the only one of its kind in Europe, has been renewed to promote debate about the future of European cities in the post-pandemic context.
The Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB) announces the eleventh European Prize for Urban Public Space. This biennial honorary contest, since 2000 acknowledging the best interventions to create, transform and recover public spaces in European cities, will recognise works carried out between 2018 and 2021.
In a context like today’s, where climate emergency and the crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemic show that cities around the world are facing new climatic, technological and social challenges, the value of public space is greater than ever.
The Prize, which is the only one in Europe dedicated to public space and is awarded both to the authors of the project and its developers, aims to reflex the centrality of these issues and become an observatory of good practices that serves to come up with possible solutions to a future in which cities will have a primary role in defining society’s evolution.
Jury
Teresa Galí-Izard, Agricultural engineer, landscape designer and lecturer at the ETH Zurich (President of the jury)
Hans Ibelings, Dutch architecture critic and historian, editor of The Architecture Observer
Eleni Myrivili, Doctor of Anthropology, and Resilience and Sustainability advisor to Athens City Council
Andreas Ruby, Director of the Swiss Architecture Museum in Basel and co-founder of Ruby Press
Paloma Strelitz, British architect, creative director of Patch and founder of Assemble, London
Špela Videčnik, architect, founder member of OFIS architects, Ljubljana, Slovenia
Weitere Informationen zu dem Gewinner und den Finalisten finden Sie unter /
More information about the winner and finalists can be found at:
www.publicspace.org/the-prize/-/edition/2022/results
CALL FOR THE EUROPEAN PRIZE FOR URBAN PUBLIC SPACE 2022
The CCCB is announcing the call for the European Prize for Urban Public Space, a prime observatory of European cities that recognizes the best works to create, recover, transform and improve public spaces in Europe.
Agricultural engineer, landscape designer and lecturer at the ETH Zurich, Teresa Galí-Izard, will be the President of the Prize’s international jury.
Promoted by the CCCB, the Prize is organized by a network of 10 architecture and urban planning centres, and over 50 experts from across the continent.
The Prize, the only one of its kind in Europe, has been renewed to promote debate about the future of European cities in the post-pandemic context.
Registration is open for submissions from 20 April to 17 May 2022. The conditions of entry and everything you need to know to take part in the Prize are available at www.publicspace.org
The Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB) announces the eleventh European Prize for Urban Public Space. This biennial honorary contest, since 2000 acknowledging the best interventions to create, transform and recover public spaces in European cities, will recognise works carried out between 2018 and 2021.
In a context like today’s, where climate emergency and the crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemic show that cities around the world are facing new climatic, technological and social challenges, the value of public space is greater than ever.
The Prize, which is the only one in Europe dedicated to public space and is awarded both to the authors of the project and its developers, aims to reflex the centrality of these issues and become an observatory of good practices that serves to come up with possible solutions to a future in which cities will have a primary role in defining society’s evolution.
International jury
The international jury of this eleventh edition is made up of renowned professionals from all over Europe.
President and representative of the CCCB
Teresa Galí-Izard, agricultural engineer and landscape designer, currently lectures in Landscape Architecture and is director of the Master of Sciences in Landscape Architecture at ETH Zurich, Switzerland.
Jury members
Hans Ibelings, Dutch architecture critic and historian, editor of The Architecture Observer.
Eleni Myrivili, Doctor of Anthropology, and Resilience and Sustainability advisor to Athens City Council.
Andreas Ruby, Director of the Swiss Architecture Museum in Basel and co-founder of Ruby Press.
Paloma Strelitz, British architect, creative director of Patch and founder of Assemble, London.
Špela Videčnik, architect, founder member of OFIS architects, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
Secretary
Lluís Ortega, Doctor of Architecture (Polytechnic University of Catalonia-UPC), Philosophy graduate (University of Barcelona) and Master of Science-AAD (Columbia University).
Partners
The European Prize for Urban Public Space is an initiative of the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB), with the collaboration of the following European institutions:
Arc en Rêve, Bordeaux, France
Architekturzentrum Wien – AzW, Vienna, Austria
ArkDes, Stockholm, Sweden
La Cité de l’Architecture et du Patrimoine, Paris, France
CIVA, Brussels, Belgium
Deutsches Architekturmuseum – DAM, Frankfurt, Germany
Eesti Arhitektuurimuuseum, Tallin, Estonia
Kortárs Építészeti Központ – Kék, Budapest, Hungary
Muzej za Arhitekturo in Oblikovanje – MAO, Ljubljana, Slovenia
The Architecture Foundation – AF, London, United Kingdom
The track record of an Award with a European and social vocation
The European Prize for Urban Public Space finds its natural space in the European city, which, despite its diversity, shares some common historical elements, such as human scale, compact design and the mixed nature of its uses. In this idea of European city, public space plays a key role in collective encounters, packed with social, economic and political values that cannot be taken apart from a physical design that accommodates them and makes them possible.
In the course of its 22 years of history and 10 editions, the Prize has had 2,206 entries and awarded 19 accolades and 35 special mentions.
The award-winning projects include such varied and relevant interventions as Barking Town Square (2008 Prize), a civic space for a suburban district in East London, which, after years of marginality, was crying out for the recovery of its lost identity and the creation of a meeting space for the new community. The open-air library in the German city of Magdeburg (2010 Prize), where, by means of a participatory process, the residents of a socially deprived neighbourhood managed to build a library with the prefabricated parts of a demolished building. The development of the old port of Marseille, France (2014 Prize), an intervention to free the docks of obstacles and vehicles, making the presence of leisure boats compatible with access for all citizens. The recovery of the irrigation channels in the thermal allotments in Caldes de Montbui, Spain (2016 Prize), giving a new lease of life to agricultural activity and creating a network of footpaths. And the renovation of Skanderbeg Square in Tirana (2018 Prize), a nerve centre in the Albanian capital and a symbolic place for the whole country that was reformed to promote and highlight its diversity, and which, with the planting of a green strip, could be a starting point for more greening in the city centre.
The Archive of the European Prize for Urban Public Space, an online consultable resource, brings together the best works submitted to the competition. With over 300 experiences in some 200 towns and cities, it is a permanent witness to and observatory of the construction and evolution of public spaces throughout Europe.
Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB)
The CCCB is a multidisciplinary arts centre devoted to exploring the big questions of contemporary society, using different languages and formats, with an extensive program of large thematic exhibitions, cycles of lectures and literary meetings, audiovisual projections and festivals. Since it was set up, the CCCB has promoted reflection on contemporary cities, understanding them as the prime space for the transformations and challenges of the world today.