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Holidays after the Fall: Seaside Architecture and Urbanism in Bulgaria and Croatia

Author/EditorBeyer,. Elke et.al. (Author)
Beyer, Elke (Author)
Hagemann, Anke (Author)
Tracing Spaces (Author)
Mihov, Nikola (Author)
Publisher: JOVIS Verlag
ISBN: 9783868592269
Pub Date13/08/2013
BindingHardback
Pages272
Dimensions (mm)240(h) * 170(w)
£26.00
excluding shipping
Availability: Available to order but dispatch within 7-10 days
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Every summer season, the sun-drenched coasts of Bulgaria and Croatia turn into densely inhabited, intensively exploited tourism industry hotspots. This book traces the various architectural and urban planning strategies pursued there since the mid 1950s, in order first to create then to further develop modern holiday destinations. It portrays (late-) modern tourism architecture and resorts of a remarkable quality and typological diversity, which have persisted both as a playground for the domestic labour force and as a viable product on the international market. Yet the authors focus above all on how, in the wake of political change and the privatization of business, individual resorts and outstanding buildings have been economically and physically restructured, in a myriad of ways, leaving a legacy of deserted ruins, cautious renovations, exorbitant conversions and on-going public protest. With photographs by Nikola Mihov, Wolfgang Thaler, et al.

Every summer season, the sun-drenched coasts of Bulgaria and Croatia turn into densely inhabited, intensively exploited tourism industry hotspots. This book traces the various architectural and urban planning strategies pursued there since the mid 1950s, in order first to create then to further develop modern holiday destinations. It portrays (late-) modern tourism architecture and resorts of a remarkable quality and typological diversity, which have persisted both as a playground for the domestic labour force and as a viable product on the international market. Yet the authors focus above all on how, in the wake of political change and the privatization of business, individual resorts and outstanding buildings have been economically and physically restructured, in a myriad of ways, leaving a legacy of deserted ruins, cautious renovations, exorbitant conversions and on-going public protest. With photographs by Nikola Mihov, Wolfgang Thaler, et al.

Michael Zinganel / Elke Beyer / Anke Hagemann (eds.)

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