2023
From Past to Future: The Walking Phenomenon in the Identity of Partizánske/Baťovany
BARTOŠOVÁ, Nina; Barbora VACKOVÁ a Veronika RYPÁK VAŇOZákladní údaje
Originální název
From Past to Future: The Walking Phenomenon in the Identity of Partizánske/Baťovany
Autoři
BARTOŠOVÁ, Nina; Barbora VACKOVÁ a Veronika RYPÁK VAŇO
Vydání
Future Anterior: Journal of Historic Preservation History, Theory, and Criticism, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 2023, 1549-9715
Další údaje
Jazyk
angličtina
Typ výsledku
Článek v odborném periodiku
Obor
50902 Social sciences, interdisciplinary
Stát vydavatele
Spojené státy
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Impakt faktor
Impact factor: 0.100 v roce 2022
Označené pro přenos do RIV
Ano
Kód RIV
RIV/00216224:14410/23:00140102
Organizační jednotka
Pedagogická fakulta
UT WoS
EID Scopus
Klíčová slova anglicky
Partizánske; Baťovany; Baťa shoe company; modernist urbanism; heritage preservation; walking
Příznaky
Mezinárodní význam, Recenzováno
Změněno: 17. 9. 2025 10:38, Mgr. Daniela Marcollová
Anotace
V originále
Partizánske, Baťovany, is even now admired as Slovakia's first functionalist town. It was conceived on the theory of the ideal industrial Baťa company town. The article points to the possible benefit of expanding traditional architectural history research to include phenomenology, as justified by both current theoretical approaches and the use of the sociological method of the focus group. This suggested the potential in the walking phenomenon to strengthen the Partizánske identity. Considering current urban design trends giving precedence to pedestrian movement, for Partizánske this is a crucial aspect of the original urban design, and an intangible value that could be promoted with relatively little dependence on political or land ownership issues. Walking, as an enhancement of being-in-the-world, can for Partizánske become not just something to tie together individual zones but also the past and future. Partizánske, originally Baťovany, is even now admired as Slovakia's first functionalist town. It was conceived on the theory of the ideal industrial Baťa company town. Baťa was a Moravian shoe manufacturer based in Zlín that in the 1930s built satellite towns in many countries, including the United States, as smaller versions of Zlín. In the second half of the twentieth century both new construction and interventions in typically Baťa architecture stifled the town's original aesthetic. Thus, Partizánske's historical roots are less apparent than in Zlín. This article points to the possible benefit of expanding traditional architectural history research to include phenomenology, as justified by both current theoretical approaches and the use of the sociological method of the focus group. This suggested the potential in the walking phenomenon to strengthen the Partizánske identity. Considering current urban design trends giving precedence to pedestrian movement, for Partizánske this is a crucial aspect of the original urban design, and an intangible value that could be promoted with relatively little dependence on political or land ownership issues. Walking, as an enhancement of being-in-the-world, can for Partizánske become not just something to tie together individual zones but also the past and future. Partizánske, originally Baťovany, is even now admired as Slovakia's first functionalist town. It was conceived on the theory of the ideal industrial Baťa company town. Baťa was a Moravian shoe manufacturer based in Zlín that in the 1930s built satellite towns in many countries, including the United States, as smaller versions of Zlín. In the second half of the twentieth century both new construction and interventions in typically Baťa architecture stifled the town's original aesthetic. Thus, Partizánske's historical roots are less apparent than in Zlín. This article points to the possible benefit of expanding traditional architectural history research to include phenomenology, as justified by both current theoretical approaches and the use of the sociological method of the focus group. This suggested the potential in the walking phenomenon to strengthen the Partizánske identity. Considering current urban design trends giving precedence to pedestrian movement, for Partizánske this is a crucial aspect of the original urban design, and an intangible value that could be promoted with relatively little dependence on political or land ownership issues. Walking, as an enhancement of being-in-the-world, can for Partizánske become not just something to tie together individual zones but also the past and future.