Text: Dominika Belanská, Braňo Bibel
Open Central Europe aims to address urban vacancy by the temporary use of vacant spaces and by understanding and discussing the mechanisms of these practices. The project partners - KÉK (Budapest), Fundacja Bec Zmiana (Warsaw), Jedlé mesto (Bratislava) and 4AM Fórum (Brno) - aim to generate debate about the newest practices of interim use in Central Europe, and make their lessons learned more accessible, applicable by transforming them into a practical guide for Central European citizens, urban communities, public and private property owners.
As a part of Open Central Europe, Dominika Belanská and Braňo Bibel (Jedlé mesto. o.z., Bratislava) took part in a workshop in Warsaw in December 2015. In February 2016, it was followed-up by a gathering in Budapest. We have visited several sites, where the transformation of previously vacant lots, spots and spaces into lively cultural places happened, part of them with the support of the Lakatlan project.
The new space of Hungarian Centre for Contemporary Architecture (KÉK) in Bartók Béla Street in Budapest, in a previously vacant shop. The timeline of 10+ years of the organization is packed with documentation of events and projects that KÉK has initiated and run. |
At the time of our visit, the space hosted an exhibition of projects of urban re-activation in Budapest. |
We started our second day in Budapest by visiting Cyklonomia, a bike workshop situated in the basement of municipality-owned building. |
Cyklonomia is a brilliant place for bike lovers. |
Bogna Świątkowska (Fundacja Bec zmiana) chatting with a guy from Cyklonomia crew. |
Judit Schanz (KÉK, Lakatlan) in Cyklonomia. |
Cyklonomia - parts of bikes are stored practically untill they become a part of a re-built vehicle. The high ceilings of the space enable that they are hanging from the ceiling. |
Júlia Oravecz and Dominika Belanská entering Leonardo Community garden. |
Community garden Leonardo is situated in currently transforming location facing heavy gentrification, in the third district´s Leonardo Da Vinci street. |
Judith Schanz, Dominika Belanská, Bogna Świątkowska and Julia Oravecz in the Leonardo community garden. |
Dominika Belanská peeks into the Leonardo garden. |
View from Bókay János street. Old goes down under the new: the future construction site opposing the Gólya community place, our next site visit. |
Entering Gólya. |
Gólya´s bar. |
Inside the Golya it we have accidentally run into an awesome retro gaming event. |
Some oldschool gamers enjoing 20 years old VR technology by running pc game Quake. |
Retro arcade terminal. Gólya community place. |
Pixel art stitching workshop. Gólya community place. |
Inside the Auróra courtyard. Auróra is a community center situated on Auróra street 11, in a building owned by the municipality. |
Dominika Belanská inside Auróra. Artisan details of the furnishings of the space are handcrafted and tell a story of the enthusiasm and dignity of Auróra's makers. |
Auróra is a regular concert and cultural venue whith its own bar. One more view into the courtyard |
Sitting inside the Auróra and enjoying talk and tee with Levente Polyák, co-founder of KÉK. |
Entering the gate of the Muszi, a unique cultural and community place at Blaha Lujza Tér. |
To enter the place, you have to ring the bell and climb to the top floor of what was originally a department store. |
Kid running and playing cheerfully in the spacious rooms of Muszi while Dominika and Bogna are resting after a day-long walk. |
There are some rules you shold not cross at Muszi community center. The freedom is in the air, though. |
Group of teenagers inside the Muzsi. To spend time here, you don't have to pay. The place has become a favored spot for local youth, and if needed, a special help and support is given to those young people who found themselves in problems, such as drug abuse. The next steps of the project Open Central Europe are a conference "Funding the Cooperative City", 6-8th April in Budapest, and workshop and site visits in Bratislava (5-7th May 2016). The project was supported by Visegrad Fund. |
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