Mega-Events
Placemaking, Regeneration and City-Regional Development
Herausgeber: Evans, Graeme
Mega-Events
Placemaking, Regeneration and City-Regional Development
Herausgeber: Evans, Graeme
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book brings together different perspectives of mega-event bidding and hosting and the legacies they produce over time.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Legacies and Mega Events60,99 €
- Place Event Marketing in the Asia Pacific Region60,99 €
- Tourism Events in Asia61,99 €
- Urban Events, Place Branding and Promotion61,99 €
- International Sport Marketing60,99 €
- John HorneUnderstanding the Olympics64,99 €
- Routledge Handbook of Sports Journalism303,99 €
-
-
-
This book brings together different perspectives of mega-event bidding and hosting and the legacies they produce over time.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 172
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. April 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 268g
- ISBN-13: 9780367777104
- ISBN-10: 036777710X
- Artikelnr.: 61211924
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 172
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. April 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 10mm
- Gewicht: 268g
- ISBN-13: 9780367777104
- ISBN-10: 036777710X
- Artikelnr.: 61211924
Graeme Evans is Professor of Creative & Cultural Economy, University of the Arts London. He is a widely published expert on creative cities and the phenomenon of mega-events and regeneration, and advises cultural agencies on cultural planning, creative industries, and mega-event impacts and strategies
Acknowledgements; Contributors; 1. Introduction (Graeme Evans) Part I:
Mega-Events: Place-Making, Regeneration and Legacy; 2. Pestilence, toxicity
and all the fun of the fair: brownfield sites, mega-events and area
regeneration, 1939-2012 (John Gold & Maggie Gold); 3. From Albertopolis to
Olympicopolis: Back to the Future? (Graeme Evans); 4. A World Fair for the
Future: Revisiting the Legacy of the Expo 98 Urban Model (Patricia
Aelbrecht); 5. The regional scale of contemporary mega-events. The Milan
Expo 2015, the post-event, and the challenges for public policies and
spatial planning (Stefano Di Vita); 6. Pimping the Faustian city:
Mega-events and urban image construction in Rio de Janeiro (Anne-Marie
Broudehoux); 7. A new road and rail link from the mountains to the coast:
the mixed legacy of Sochi Olympic's most expensive project (Sven Daniel
Wolfe); Part II: Alternative Mega-Events strategies: critiques and
responses to failed/serial bids; 8. Bidding trepidation: Stockholm's
uncertain relationship with the Olympic Games (Eric Olson, Robert Oliver
and Luke Juran); 9. What HafenCity Hamburg can learn from the Olympics
(Mathias Kuhlmann); 10. Toronto: A Tale of Many Mega-Event Bids (Robert
Oliver); Glossary/Index
Mega-Events: Place-Making, Regeneration and Legacy; 2. Pestilence, toxicity
and all the fun of the fair: brownfield sites, mega-events and area
regeneration, 1939-2012 (John Gold & Maggie Gold); 3. From Albertopolis to
Olympicopolis: Back to the Future? (Graeme Evans); 4. A World Fair for the
Future: Revisiting the Legacy of the Expo 98 Urban Model (Patricia
Aelbrecht); 5. The regional scale of contemporary mega-events. The Milan
Expo 2015, the post-event, and the challenges for public policies and
spatial planning (Stefano Di Vita); 6. Pimping the Faustian city:
Mega-events and urban image construction in Rio de Janeiro (Anne-Marie
Broudehoux); 7. A new road and rail link from the mountains to the coast:
the mixed legacy of Sochi Olympic's most expensive project (Sven Daniel
Wolfe); Part II: Alternative Mega-Events strategies: critiques and
responses to failed/serial bids; 8. Bidding trepidation: Stockholm's
uncertain relationship with the Olympic Games (Eric Olson, Robert Oliver
and Luke Juran); 9. What HafenCity Hamburg can learn from the Olympics
(Mathias Kuhlmann); 10. Toronto: A Tale of Many Mega-Event Bids (Robert
Oliver); Glossary/Index
Acknowledgements; Contributors; 1. Introduction (Graeme Evans) Part I:
Mega-Events: Place-Making, Regeneration and Legacy; 2. Pestilence, toxicity
and all the fun of the fair: brownfield sites, mega-events and area
regeneration, 1939-2012 (John Gold & Maggie Gold); 3. From Albertopolis to
Olympicopolis: Back to the Future? (Graeme Evans); 4. A World Fair for the
Future: Revisiting the Legacy of the Expo 98 Urban Model (Patricia
Aelbrecht); 5. The regional scale of contemporary mega-events. The Milan
Expo 2015, the post-event, and the challenges for public policies and
spatial planning (Stefano Di Vita); 6. Pimping the Faustian city:
Mega-events and urban image construction in Rio de Janeiro (Anne-Marie
Broudehoux); 7. A new road and rail link from the mountains to the coast:
the mixed legacy of Sochi Olympic's most expensive project (Sven Daniel
Wolfe); Part II: Alternative Mega-Events strategies: critiques and
responses to failed/serial bids; 8. Bidding trepidation: Stockholm's
uncertain relationship with the Olympic Games (Eric Olson, Robert Oliver
and Luke Juran); 9. What HafenCity Hamburg can learn from the Olympics
(Mathias Kuhlmann); 10. Toronto: A Tale of Many Mega-Event Bids (Robert
Oliver); Glossary/Index
Mega-Events: Place-Making, Regeneration and Legacy; 2. Pestilence, toxicity
and all the fun of the fair: brownfield sites, mega-events and area
regeneration, 1939-2012 (John Gold & Maggie Gold); 3. From Albertopolis to
Olympicopolis: Back to the Future? (Graeme Evans); 4. A World Fair for the
Future: Revisiting the Legacy of the Expo 98 Urban Model (Patricia
Aelbrecht); 5. The regional scale of contemporary mega-events. The Milan
Expo 2015, the post-event, and the challenges for public policies and
spatial planning (Stefano Di Vita); 6. Pimping the Faustian city:
Mega-events and urban image construction in Rio de Janeiro (Anne-Marie
Broudehoux); 7. A new road and rail link from the mountains to the coast:
the mixed legacy of Sochi Olympic's most expensive project (Sven Daniel
Wolfe); Part II: Alternative Mega-Events strategies: critiques and
responses to failed/serial bids; 8. Bidding trepidation: Stockholm's
uncertain relationship with the Olympic Games (Eric Olson, Robert Oliver
and Luke Juran); 9. What HafenCity Hamburg can learn from the Olympics
(Mathias Kuhlmann); 10. Toronto: A Tale of Many Mega-Event Bids (Robert
Oliver); Glossary/Index