Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/11147/7148

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  • Book Part
    Citation - WoS: 1
    Citation - Scopus: 1
    Organizing: Spontaneously Developed Urban Technology Precincts
    (Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., 2012) Çevikayak, Gülnur; Velibeyoğlu, Koray
    [No abstract available]
  • Book
    Citation - Scopus: 68
    Knowledge-Based Urban Development: Planning and Applications in the Information Era
    (IGI Global Publishing, 2008) Yiğitcanlar, Tan; Velibeyoğlu, Koray; Baum, S.
    In the globalizing world, knowledge and information (and the social and technological settings for their production and communication) are now seen as keys to economic prosperity. The economy of a knowledge city creates value-added products using research, technology, and brainpower. The social benefit of knowledge-based urban development (KBUD); however, extends beyond aggregate economic growth. Knowledge-Based Urban Development: Planning and Applications in the Information Era covers the theoretical, thematic, and country-specific issues of knowledge cities to underline the growing importance of KBUD all around the world, providing academics, researchers, and practitioners with substantive research on the decisive lineaments of urban development for knowledge-based production (drawing attention to new planning processes to foster such development), and worldwide best practices and case studies in the field of urban development. © 2008 by IGI Global. All rights reserved.
  • Book Part
    Teaching a Regional Landscape Project Studio in the Interdisciplinary Setting
    (Taylor and Francis Ltd., 2019) Kaplan, Adnan; Velibeyoğlu, Koray
    Regional and urban landscapes in the age of the Anthropocene need to support recognition of complex and dynamic ecosystems. Water-based regional context and its transformative power at regional and urban scales have been themed on landscape studios of some scholarly works such as G. M. Kondolf et al. and S. Nijhuis and D. Jauslin. The interdisciplinary ‘regional landscape project studio’ follows a didactic approach that combines regional planning and specific mode of regional and urban transformation thinking. The whole idea of the graduate studio is, therefore, to apply landscape infrastructure and the fourth nature into ‘the regional landscape-urban transformation’ equilibrium, as a novel way to healing our living environments. Landscape infrastructure is being explored in urban studies as a concept/reality that expands the traditional set of spatial planning and design strategies towards the multifunctional system. The association of hydrological pattern with natural and urban landscapes calls for site-specific design interventions in some critical cross-section.