Climate of innovation
Ivanská cesta 30/A
Bratislava
Okná pre pasívne domy
Galvaniho 15 B
Bratislava
Tehelná 1203/6
Zlaté Moravce
BIM knižnice a objekty
Stará Vajnorská 139
Bratislava
Dokonalá izolácia
Stará Vajnorská 139
Bratislava
Prielohy 1012/1C
Žilina
Štúrova 136B
Nitra
Začiatok | 20.4.2022 12:00 |
Koniec | 17.5.2022 12:00 |
Miesto | Center of Contemporary Culture of Barcelona (CCCB) |
Adresa | , , Španielsko |
Druh podujatia | Podujatie |
Kontakt | The European Prize for Urban Public Space |
The European Prize for Urban Public Space is an initiative of the Center of Contemporary Culture of Barcelona (CCCB) which, since 2000 and on a biennial basis, recognizes the best interventions of creation and transformation in the public spaces of European cities.
The Prize has an honorary nature, is awarded jointly to the authors and promoters of works carried out in the 47 countries that make up the Council of Europe and gives the maximum dissemination to the selected works through the network of European collaborators and partners of the project.
The Prize offers a unique perspective on European cities and aims to become a space of reference to discuss the challenges of urban public space, in collaboration with experts and architectural, academic, and cultural institutions from all over the European territory.
Throughout its 22-year history and 10 editions, 2,206 works have been submitted to the Prize and 19 prizes and 35 mentions have been awarded. A selection of the best 357 works from all editions is published on the project's website (www.publicspace.org).
PUBLIC AND URBAN SCAPE
The European Prize for Urban Public Space has the natural space in the European city that, despite its diversity, shares some common historical elements, such as human scale, compact design and a mixed-use character. In this idea of the European city, public space plays a key role in collective encounters, loaded of political, economic and social values that are inseparable from a physical design that accommodates them and makes them possible. In this way, the Prize, from the observation of the quality of public spaces, also becomes a project that generates attention and reflection on the quality of life and the democratic quality of European cities.
The cities of Europe are facing challenges and transformations that cross the urban reality around the world. From this perspective, the Award proposes a specific look from our most immediate reality to a debate on the future of cities that is global, and that, in a progressively urbanized world, is gaining more and more importance every day. To think the European city is to think about concrete solutions that are being given today in Europe to respond to the global challenge of the urban future.
Today, the climate emergency or the crisis generated by the COVID-19 pandemic has transformed global agendas, has added more challenges to the current social problems in our cities and has become a central vector of urban thinking. Issues such as shortages, inequalities, mobility, migrations or emergencies place cities in front of challenges for which there are still no clear answers and which have a direct impact on urban design and public spaces, due to their clearly social or public function. In addition, the impact of technological transformations is an element that can also directly intervene in the urban realities of the surrounding area.
The Award aims to reflect the centrality of these issues and to become an observatory of good practices that will allow us to think of possible solutions for a future in which cities will play a key role in defining the evolution of society. It is a unique award in Europe, as it promotes a space that is both public (open and universally accessible) and urban.
PURPOSE OF THE AWARD: 11TH EDITION (2022)
After a hiatus since its last edition in 2018, the CCCB announces a new edition of the Award with the aim of valuing those works made between 2018 and 2021.
The call is open, free and takes place in two rounds. In the first round, the jury of this edition will select 25 works that will be published on the project's website and will become part of its archive. From among the 25 selected, there will be 5 finalist works that will go on to the second round.
In this second round of the call, the jury will award the finalist works for their quality and consistency with the criteria defined in these rules. As a result of this second round, the jury will designate a winner and the mentions that, optionally, they deem appropriate.
The award ceremony and associated activities will take place over two days during the fall of 2022 at the CCCB. The authors of the works included in the second round (finalist works) will be invited to present their projects and will receive a commemorative diploma. The selected works and finalist works will be the subject of a publication with contributions from the authors and renowned critics.
ADVISORY COMMITTEE
The Award has an institutional network around Europe that allows to consolidate the project throughout the territory and to guarantee access to the most outstanding works of intervention in public space. These institutions of recognized prestige will support the dissemination of the Prize and will participate and promote the activities focused on public space generated by the project in the form of debates, exhibitions, and articles, among others.
The institutions that are part of the Advisory Committee for this year's edition are:
Arc en rêve (Bordeaux), ArkDes (Stockholm), Architekturzentrum Wien (Vienna), Cité de l’Architecture et du Patrimoine (Paris), CIVA (Brussels), Deutsches Architekturmuseum (Frankfurt), Eesti Arhitektuurimuuseum (Tallinn), Kortárs Építészeti Központ (Budapest), Muzej za Arhitekturo in Oblikovanje (Ljubljana) and The Architecture Foundation (London).
JURY
The jury of the Award is made up of renowned professionals from all over Europe. The jury for this year's edition will be formed by:
President: Teresa Galí-Izard, agricultural engineer and landscape designer (Barcelona/Zürich)
Members:
Hans Ibelings, architecture critic and historian (Amsterdam/Montreal)
Eleni Myrivili, anthropologist and expert in heat resilience (Athens)
Andreas Ruby, architecture historian, curator and publisher (Basel)
Paloma Strelitz, strategist and creative director with a focus on cities, culture, and technology (London)
Špela Videčnik, architect (Ljubljana)
Secretary: Lluís Ortega, architect (Barcelona)
The jury will consider only those entries that comply with the terms and conditions of participation established in these rules and may declare the competition void. The secretary will assist the jury and will take the minutes of the sessions during the voting process.
EVALUATION CRITERIA
The jury will evaluate those proposals that best respond to the emerging challenges of public space and will take into account the incidence of the urban transformation in its specific context and its impact on collective life, from a cultural, social and environmental perspective. The evaluation will consider the following criteria:
Architectural or urbanistic quality of the built space.
Public ownership and/or clearly public vocation of the project.
Multidisciplinary character of the drafting/promoting team, with integration of multiple fields of expertise and sensitivities regarding public space, as well as architecture and urbanism.
Explicitly urban character of the intervention. The size of the project is not a factor to be taken into account, but projects located in medium and large cities or in significant urban centers will be considered.
Adequacy to the civic functions required in the urban space, both those related to the use and occupation of the space by citizens and those related to the collective imaginary and the preservation of historical memory.
Innovative responses to climatic conditions and the contribution of environmental improvements in the field of mobility and sustainability in the use of resources.
Ability of the works to reduce the segregation of uses and social inequalities present in the urban structure and the elimination of physical and/or symbolic barriers.
Incidence of the works on the city limits and capacity to promote a harmonious relationship with the peripheries and most immediate natural environments.
Ability of the works to generate debate on the limits of public space, both formally and functionally in relation to adjacent spaces.
CONDITIONS OF PARTICIPATION
Works for the creation, restoration or improvement of public space completed between January 1, 2018 and December 31, 2021 (both included) located within the geographical scope of the Council of Europe are eligible for the Award.
The list of countries that make up the Council of Europe can be consulted at this link: https://www.coe.int/ca/web/about-us/our-member-states
Due to the fact that some urban interventions have very long execution terms, if the work has not been fully completed during the indicated period, it will still be eligible for the Award if it has enough execution phases completed, so that the urban impact of the whole action can be assessed.
The works may be submitted by the authors or by the promoters, with the assumption that there is the consent of both parties in the registration and inclusion of the respective personal data.
SELECTION PROCESS
1st round: Selected works and finalists
This first round opens the call for nominations for the European Prize for Urban Public Space for the recognition of two categories of work:
Selected works: the jury will evaluate all the entries registered and select the 25 most highly rated proposals that will be recognized as such in the dissemination of the Award.
Finalist works: from the selected works, the jury will select five finalists that will go on to the second round.
These rules and the other complementary documents are available on the Prize website www.publicspace.org. Submission to the Prize implies the acceptance of the entire content of the rules by the participant.
Form of presentation
Entries must be submitted exclusively telematically, using the electronic form available on the Award's web platform: www.publicspace.org.
The submitter may modify and complete the registration form as many times as he/she wishes until the registration process is completed. In the event that the same submitter presents more than one work, an online registration process must be carried out for each of the works. Detailed instructions on how to register can be found in the registration guide available on the Award website.
Documentation
At the time of registration, the following information must be included:
Title of the work, in the original language and its English translation.
Technical specifications of the work.
Credits: authors, promoters.
A minimum of 10 and a maximum of 20 digital images (photographs, drawings and plans), in .jpg or .png format with a minimum length of 2000px on its long side and a maximum weight of 3MB per image.
Descriptive report in English divided into four chapters: state prior to the work, object of the intervention, description of the intervention and final assessment. Each chapter should be between 800 and 1200 characters long with spaces.
Term
Entries may be submitted from April 20, 2022 at 12:00 noon until May 17, 2022 at 12:00 noon.
2nd round: Awarded works
Only the five finalists resulting from the first round will participate in this phase. They will make a presentation in front of the jury in order to open a debate between the authors of each proposal and the members of the jury. This presentation will take place at a public event, as part of the activities to be held prior to the award ceremony of the eleventh edition of the Prize. Once the jury's deliberation has been completed, the results of the voting and the winning works (winner and mentions) will be made public.
Documentation
The jury reserves the right to ask each finalist for additional information in order to properly evaluate the selection of the winners. Depending on the quality of the material included, finalists may be contacted to provide high-resolution images and further documentation.
The finalist teams will make a presentation to the jury, which should include all the material deemed necessary for a correct understanding of the work.
CALENDAR
20 april: Start of registration
17 may: Closing of registration
14/15 july: Jury meeting to select 20 projects and 5 finalists
18 july: Presentation of the finalists' works
14-16 november:
1st session: Presentation of the finalists' works in front of the jury at a públic event at the CCCB
2nd session: Jury's final deliberation and award ceremony