Immediate changes – private ownership Following the
Velvet Revolution of 1989, all rigid state planning controls disappeared, and a key change was the transfer of all property from state to private ownership through the process of
restitution. Property and small businesses like restaurants or grocery stores claimed during the communist period was given back to previous owners or their descendants, if adequate identification within a six-month period in late 1990 and early 1991 could be provided. Total ownership of state owned housing stock was relinquished in 1991, leading to the quick emergence of a private rental sector to benefit from the housing surplus. The over-supply of housing was evident in
Olomouc, where 20 000 Soviet soldiers were stationed and officers and families lived in high-rise apartments. After the fall of communism, the soldiers left and completely stripped bare the apartments. The number of dwellings per 1,000 inhabitants in Czechoslovakia was higher than in some advanced countries. Planning for industry and
brownfield development was largely put on hold, while new government focused on selling the firms to private investors. During this process, the problems of previous pollution by industry became widely known and new owners became concerned about contamination from former state companies.
Devolved government and no strategic coordination After the
fall of communism in 1989, there was immediate and wide support for a more local,
devolved reform of government in
Eastern Europe, and Czechoslovakia followed this model. Municipalities of varying sizes formed, and today
Prague comprises 57 boroughs that make autonomous decisions about urban planning, policy and city-management. While there is growing use of strategic planning in boroughs, the fragmentation and uneven size of each borough makes citywide policy coordination (in the form of master plans or frameworks) difficult. Currently, planning is often left to experts, with some possibilities for participation, although national and citywide conservation bodies do not currently contribute significantly to policy making.
Social concerns of new urban planning The
privatization of houses created the first private
landlords who held around 6-7 per cent of the housing stock in the Czech Republic, and inadvertently segmented the Czech rental market into ‘privileged’ and ‘non-privileged’ parts. Under
capitalism, many people continued to work their normal jobs, but earned salaries much higher or lower than before. Social exclusion has the potential to occur in larger cities like Prague, as inner-city areas are
gentrified for foreigners or wealthy middle class Czechs, and other areas with working-class households are left dilapidated. For example, in
Hrušov, a part of
Ostrava, income disparity increases socio-spatial differentiation, with residents needing to alter their livelihoods in response to their position in the shrinking city.
Free-market effects Today, the
Czech Republic operates under a
capitalist market economy, increasing demand for private investment in the form of new developments. The post-communist government hopes that these new economic forces do not destroy the old-city fabric, but will instead provide funds to secure restoration and enhancement. This is proving difficult, as national or international companies often show little interest in local issues .
Tourism , a centre for tourism in the city
Tourism rose to become a key industry in the Czech Republic’s economic recovery during the 1990s, with up to 300 000 tourists visiting Prague each day. Tourism infrastructure is evident in, and has begun to reshape the centre of Prague’s historical city, as residential zones are converting to commercial use to service the tourist trade. A delicate balance between transforming the
urban form for tourism and preserving the heritage sections of the city now exists, because such complete, preserved historical architecture and monuments are the reason many tourists are attracted to Prague in the first place. This is recognised by the city’s current master plan, which explicitly refers to this balance, and points to other heritage sites outside the centre of Prague to ease the tension on the centre.
Motorisation and the mall , available around the time of motorisation Similarly, the rate of
motorisation rose rapidly after the
Velvet Revolution, with the number of privately owned cars per thousand people jumping 77% from 276 to 489 between 1990 and 1996. As a result, the previous lack of planning for western style car usage is now a problem for
local governments. Due to this rise in car use and a shift in retail market demand, developers began constructing large
shopping malls at a rapid pace, usually on the city’s outskirts, with the first mall opening in 1997. Malls pose another challenge for current urban planning, as people shop less often, but for longer periods and are less likely to walk to the shops, however are not re-locating closer to the shopping malls.
Scepticism of planning There is a significant cultural reluctance of many
Czech people to accept or trust urban planning, as it is often associated with memories of the past over-controlling communist regime. Often, planning is seen as contradictory to the fundamental goal of a building a
market economy without public intervention. This could be attributed to the technical kinds of
statutory planning which are currently in use. Despite the criticism, urban planning is still necessary even in the Market economy of the current day
Czech Republic in order to reverse years of environmental neglect of the former communist government. ==Notes==