The Famagusta Ecocity: A New Path for Peace in Cyprus

EMU I-REP

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dc.contributor.author Markides, Emily
dc.contributor.author Boğaç, Ceren
dc.contributor.author Kelly, Roger
dc.contributor.author Markides, Vasia
dc.contributor.author Elia, Christina
dc.contributor.author Mullen, Fiona
dc.contributor.author Haffar, Warren
dc.contributor.author Hançer, Polat
dc.contributor.author Garma-Fernandez, Armando
dc.contributor.author Wampler, Jan
dc.contributor.author Christodoulou, Nektarios
dc.contributor.author Rossetou, Zoi
dc.contributor.editor Markides, Emily
dc.contributor.editor Boğaç, Ceren
dc.contributor.editor Kelly, Roger
dc.date.accessioned 2020-09-25T10:44:01Z
dc.date.available 2020-09-25T10:44:01Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.citation Markides, E., Boğaç, C. Kelly, R. (2019). The Famagusta Ecocity: A New Path for Peace in Cyprus, The Famagusta Ecocity Publishing, Famagusta, Cyprus, ISBN 978-9925-572-86-1 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11129/4574
dc.description Book of The Famagusta Ecocity: A New Path for Peace in Cyprus en_US
dc.description.abstract There was a children’s toy that was molten in the presence of silence and desolation. Breakfast tables were set for the trapped souls of the 45-year-human-free section of the city. Another morning flashed by divided by barbed wires. Yet, people on the other side of the border, went about their everyday activities, eating, talking, sleeping and getting older… A fragmented city, fragmented lives within a fragmented country! What would you choose: To watch idly from a distance, to wait for an ex machine Deus to intervene, or to take action? This book is dedicated to those who chose to take action for a better life for all. It traces a road map not travelled by many along ecological paths that connect rather than segregate offering splendid vistas and bold visions to its readers. It is a book written by a group of people whose roots are intertwined yet, they only learned about the patterns of their lives incidentally. It is a guide for an ecopolis that does not stand far away. The book presents eco-friendly peace practices, which may relieve the wounds of the city of Famagusta so that it can be entrusted as a healed and wholesome ecocity to future generations. There are many aspects of sustainable life that cannot be discussed without touching upon all others. However, it is impossible to cover every aspect of sustainability within a single book even though this book has tried to cover as extensive a ground as possible. Therefore, this book offers a selection of thoughts, scientific statements, examples and design ideas regarding how an integrated Famagusta will promote peaceful coexistence among all its inhabitants, embrace the latest sustainable and renewable technologies and attract high-quality, job-creating, commerce, tourism and investment. The book is organized in four parts: In Part One, “The Place, its People and their Ordeals” three women are introduced. In Chapter one, Emily Markides shares her journey very much focused upon an ecocity vision for an integrated and peaceful Famagusta. Emily had to leave her hometown to become a refugee in 1974. In Chapter two, Ceren Boğaç who was born in Famagusta after 1974 and raised in a dwelling over-looking the abandoned district of the city, shares her experience of living an entire life with that memorial burden. In Chapter three, Vasia Markides talks about the Famagusta Ecocity Project and how the roads of these three women are intertwined along with the lives of so many others. Part Two addresses “Time and Opportunities” offered by the ecocity team members. In Chapter four, Christina Elia asks what kind of a city we want to live in today by stressing contemporary urban problems. In Chapter five, Fiona Mullen, analyses the sustainable opportunities for businesses and foreign investment for the sake of a better environment. In Part Three, “Urban, Ecological Sustainability and its Challenges” are being discussed. In Chapter six, Roger Kelly reviews the consequences of climate change and its particular impact on Cyprus and Famagusta. In Chapter seven, Warren Haffar discusses the implications of a sustainable development model with a specific focus on peace-building processes and on conflict transformation. In Chapter eight, Ceren Boğaç and Polat Hançer identify eco-friendly building applications by stressing the reciprocal relationship between eco architecture and an ecocity framework. In Chapter nine, Armando Garma-Fernandez addresses the best, currently existent architectural applications of energy efficient, sustainable buildings. In Part Four, “Design Proposals and Responses” are being introduced. In Chapter ten, Jan Wampler presents the Cyprus architectural design studio process and proposals of the Famagusta Ecocity Project. In Chapter eleven, Nektarios Christodoulou and Zoi Rossetou conclude on the beneficial influence of the project on the current status of ethnic relations in Cyprus and address responses and experiences of the bi-communal participants of the Cyprus architectural design studio. en_US
dc.description.sponsorship The right of The Famagusta Ecocity Project to be identified as author of this work has been asserted by it in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1998. en_US
dc.description.tableofcontents Part One: The Place, its People and their Ordeals CHAPTER 1: Under the Willow Tree Emily Markides CHAPTER 2: To Breathe upon a City Ceren Boğaç CHAPTER 3: The Origins of the Famagusta Ecocity Project (FEP): A Story-Telling Experiment Vasia Markides Part Two: Time and Opportunities CHAPTER 4: What Kind of a City Do We Want Famagusta to Be? Chaotic Urbanization or an Ecocity? Christina Elia CHAPTER 5: Economic Ecocity Opportunities for Cyprus Fiona Mullen Part Three: Urban Ecological Sustainability and its Challenges CHAPTER 6: The Impact of Climate Change on Cyprus and Famagusta Roger Kelly CHAPTER 7: Urban Planning and Conflict Transformation as Pathways to Sustainable Development Warren Haffar CHAPTER 8: A Transformational Process of Integration: Ecocity and Eco Architecture Ceren Boğaç & Polat Hançer CHAPTER 9: Place-Specific Design Armando Garma-Fernandez Part Four: Design Proposals and Responses CHAPTER 10: Cyprus Architecture Design Studio Jan Wampler CHAPTER 11: Participatory Urban Planning as a Tool for Reconciliation: The Case of the Famagusta Ecocity Project (FEP) Nektarios Christodoulou & Zoi Rossetou en_US
dc.language.iso eng en_US
dc.publisher The Famagusta Ecocity Project en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseries ISBN 978-9925-572-86-1;
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess en_US
dc.subject Ecocity en_US
dc.subject Eco-architecture en_US
dc.subject Architecture en_US
dc.subject Famagusta en_US
dc.subject Peacebuilding en_US
dc.subject Community participation en_US
dc.subject Eco-friendly peace practices en_US
dc.subject Famausta Ecocity Project en_US
dc.subject Sustainable economy en_US
dc.subject Climate change en_US
dc.subject Ecological sustainability en_US
dc.subject Sustainable development model en_US
dc.title The Famagusta Ecocity: A New Path for Peace in Cyprus en_US
dc.type book en_US
dc.description.version E-book en_US
dc.contributor.department Eastern Mediterranean University, Faculty of Architecture, Department of Architecture en_US


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