Urbanoid Northwest: an identity for a railway complex

Campo Grande’s urbanization was linked to a railway track, giving rise to new neighborhoods and cultures that were mixed with the already existing population. In the mid-90s, the railway track deactivation and removal from its urban network occurred, and, in this setting, railway spaces and their hi...

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Sonraí Bibleagrafaíochta
Príomhúdar: Bispo de Souza, Jadher Marcos
Formáid: Online
Teanga:spa
Foilsithe: Universidad de Lima. Carrera de Arquitectura 2020
Rochtain Ar Líne:https://revistas.ulima.edu.pe/index.php/Limaq/article/view/4818
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Achoimre:Campo Grande’s urbanization was linked to a railway track, giving rise to new neighborhoods and cultures that were mixed with the already existing population. In the mid-90s, the railway track deactivation and removal from its urban network occurred, and, in this setting, railway spaces and their history started losing their identity. As a Brazilian state’s capital, alternatives with utopian solutions could be provided to the complex, resulting in 21st-century projects that could be used for public transportation, and thus generate a change of direction in the economy and tourism. This paper discusses the reality found in Southern Mato Grosso, as well as itshistorical and urban space evolution.