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Professional paper

https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.47960/2232-9080.2024.27.14.37

REGULATORY PLANS FOR THE WESTERN PART OF ZAGREB BETWEEN TWO WORLD WARS

Vedran Ivanković ; University of Zagreb, Faculty of Architecture
Petra Pažin ; University of Mostar, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Architecture and Geodesy


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Abstract

In the period between the two world wars, Zagreb did not have a general regulatory basis according to which it would develop. Partial regulatory bases are created for individual areas. The western part of the city, which is bounded by the Republic of Austria Street in the east, Ilica in the north, the railway line in the south and the Črnomerca stream in the west, and which was included in the Regulatory basis from 1887 as an extension of the Lower Town, is being built by interpolating the blocks according to several regulatory bases created for individual regions. Industrial complexes, which at that time had priority over military ones, did not leave a significant urban element in the urban sense, and exceptions are rare, such as the administration building of the Factory "Hinka Francka sinovi d.d.". The construction in the western part of Zagreb between the two world wars was of a lower design and, in terms of construction, of lower quality than the previous era.

Keywords

Zagreb; Regulatory basis of Zagreb; Industrial architecture between the two world wars

Hrčak ID:

318601

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/318601

Publication date:

28.6.2024.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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