The Housing issue after 1989
1 [72] 2021Table of contents:
- 1. IntroDorota Leśniak-Rychlak
- 2. How Central Europe lost its right to housing, and how to get it backWeronika Parfianowicz
- 3. EMPTY AGORA: HOUSING CONSTELLATIONS OF THE THIRD POLISH REPUBLICKinga Zemła
- 4. From tower blocks to tower blocksVladimir Czumalo
- 5. Restitution, re-privatization, deregulation. Czech housing policy after 1989Gaby Khazalova
- 6. Town for sale: the crisis of Berlin’s housing policyMałgorzata Popiołek-Roßkamp
- 7. Farewell to TBS?Kamil TrepkaZuzanna Mielczarek
- 8. People will take to the streetsWojciech Wilczyk
- 9. Denial syndrome. Why are we unable to sort out gated communities?Agata Twardoch
- 10. The social life of creditDorota Leśniak-RychlakMikołaj Lewicki
- 11. Non-housingKacper Kępiński
- 12. The need for new modernismŁukasz Pancewicz
- 13. Will urban standard save us?Rajmund Ryś
- 14. By themselves, for themselvesZofia Piotrowska
- 15. Budapest. In a clinch between luxury developments and Orbán’s governmentAlžbĕta Medková
- 16. Bratislava. A city with no apartments that has decided to address the housing crisisAlžbĕta Medková
- 17. Slaves to prefabricationMaria Navotná
- 18. The Future of Modern Urban FormsRegina Balla
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