04243nam 2200601 450 991079834860332120200520144314.03-0356-0670-610.1515/9783035606706(CKB)3710000000718407(EBL)4539660(PQKBManifestationID)16504123(PQKBWorkID)15034984(PQKB)22076247(MiAaPQ)EBC4539660(DE-B1597)455235(OCoLC)951505768(DE-B1597)9783035606706(Au-PeEL)EBL4539660(CaPaEBR)ebr11218622(CaONFJC)MIL928542(PPN)264911830(EXLCZ)99371000000071840720160624h20162016 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrLessons of informality architecture and urban planning for emerging territories : concepts from Ethiopia /Felix Heisel, Bisrat Kifle (eds.)Basel, Switzerland :Birkhäuser,2016.©20161 online resource (224 p.)Description based upon print version of record.3-0356-0672-2 3-0356-0669-2 Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface: From documentaries to architectural strategies -- Introduction: Informality in emerging territories -- Housing in an informally grown city -- Landownership and the leasehold system -- A “new” Addis Ababa -- The ruralization of urban centres in Ethiopia -- Social dynamics and development -- Persisting meaning and evolving spaces -- Bottom-up insurance systems -- The economic importance of recycling -- Microeconomies, a formalized strategy -- Addis Ababa, a rental city -- City preservation through tourism -- From density to intensity -- Materializing informality -- Building laws for innovation -- Decentralized infrastructural systems -- Spatial dialogic -- _Spaces / The documentary series -- Editors and contributors -- Acknowledgements -- Ilustration credits Informal settlements made up of corrugated iron shacks and other materials are a ubiquitous feature in the megacities of Africa, Asia and Latin America. In response to the enormous influx of migrants from the countryside, the informal city experienced a phenomenal growth. While rightly criticized for their lack of hygiene and for their low-level living conditions, these shelters nevertheless provide planning strategies and possibly even a roadmap to a resilient city in an emerging territory. The unregistered economic activities associated with them proliferate in a similar way and basic urban services are increasingly provided informally. Examples of these economic phenomena are microloans, bottom-up insurance or professions such as the "Kuré-Yalew" (refuse collector), who acts as an "urban miner" and thus contributes a valuable service to the community by recycling materials.Provisorisch gebaute Behausungen wie etwa Wellblechhütten sind in den Metropolen Afrikas, Asiens und Lateinamerikas allgegenwärtig. Oft kritisiert für die unhygienischen Lebensumstände, gelten diese ungeplant entstandenen Siedlungengleichwohl als vielschichtiges Element auf dem Weg zu einer resilienten Stadt. Solch urbane „Informalität" ist typisch für Schwellenländer, in denen heute ca. 68 % der Weltbevölkerung leben. Sie wird hier exemplarisch an Äthiopien und insbesondere Addis Abeba analysiert. Neben Ansätzen für den Wohnungsbau stellt das Buch auch ökonomische Strukturen vor: Mikrokreditwesen, „bottom-up"-Versicherungssysteme oder Berufe wie der „Kuré-Yalew" (Müllsammler), der im Sinne des „Urban Mining" einen wertvollen Beitrag zur Wiederverwendung von Abfallstoffen leistet.City planningCity planningEthiopiaCity planning.City planning307.1216Heisel FelixKifle BisratMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910798348603321Lessons of informality3819862UNINA