The city where we live today is a gathering of unique spaces and the daily exchanges among people are limited between homogeneous areas. In this paper, we will briefly examine the concept of the "intermediate" region of these limited unique spaces, the concept of urban boundary, and modern urban environmental conditions. In this article we will focus on the traditional boundary of the port city, the waterfront. In the last part, researching "Nea Paralia" which is recent modern seaside intervention in Thessaloniki as an example of traditional limit condition, Recent reconstruction is to solve the edge problem by integrating waterfront into urban structure I think that it is.
Separation enables and restricts different people. Based on these arguments, in this paper, in order to collectively generate changes of urban boundary, boundary, boundary, inclusion, and exclusion, in the daily urban life the technology related to secular commodities and materials , Practice, and how to change space. The welfare system further hollowed out, a series of social conflicts stand out in European cities, structural and physical vulnerabilities worsened. From this point of view, various citizenship and networks are used to improve and protect the services of urban living. Government projects create "cohesiveness" within communities and communities, and the "push" program encourages individuals to make "social" choices. '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' '' ''
Abstract: The open space of the city provides its own channel for the study of social space in the history of the city. We propose seven categories to help scholars find and analyze urban open spaces in history: food production areas, parks and gardens, leisure space, plaza, street, transportation and accompanying space. We compare archaeological, historical and recent examples in a wide range using these categories and comparison of gray and green spaces. Top-down and bottom-up actions are dialectical in the establishment, use and regeneration of urban open spaces, and many open spaces have proved to be particularly flexible in providing services to the public . These findings will provide information for comparative urban analysis that will help to understand current discussions on socio-economic, political and urban ecological functions of open spaces and public spaces from the context I can do it.
Until the early civilization, the open space of the city has always been an important place for cultural, political and economic life. From the alley of Babylon to the modern Phoenix alleys, the format and function of the open space is based on concrete criteria. Cultural arrangements vary widely, while maintaining a series of similar characteristics. As part of an ancient interdisciplinary project