RT info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart T1 Abandoned army barracks in Friuli Venezia Giulia (Italy) as a potential for new time-shaped community landscapes A1 Fabris, Luca Maria Francesco A1 Camerin, Federico K1 Transition K1 Post-military K1 Open project K1 3329 Planificación Urbana AB The dismantling of the Italian Army Barracks in the Norther-East of Italy in the last 20 years has left a series of wide abandoned areas. In these places, nature has freely operated as a designer, creating new transitional landscapes in the places devoted to protect the Italian borders during the Cold War. We could talk about ‘auto-regenerative’ landscapes. This paper aims to illustrate briefly the process-making of this kind of unconventional landscape over the second half of the XX century in the Region Friuli Venezia Giulia through different scales of intervention that have activated multiple spatial relations over the time. This exceptional infrastructure-based landscape, sized-up by the Italian Army necessities, after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 has been reconfigured and gradually abandoned, becoming almost completely unused from the year 2000. Authors propose a reading of these derelict spaces and formulate possible new scenarios of sustainable regeneration and inclusive reintegration that aspire to promote a kind of open project to return them, as a social pay-back after more than 100 years of militarization, to the Friuli Venezia Giulia communities. PB Springer SN 978-3-031-25713-1 YR 2024 FD 2024 LK https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/68437 UL https://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/68437 LA eng NO FABRIS, Luca Maria Francesco; CAMERIN, Federico (2024): “Abandoned Army Barracks in Friuli Venezia Giulia (Italy) as a Potential for New Time-shaped Community Landscapes”. En Agnoletti, Mauro; Dobričič, Saša; Matteini, Tessa; Palerm, Juan Manuel -eds.-, Cultivating Continuity of the European Landscape. Environmental History, vol. 15. Cham: Springer, pp. 321-329. ISBN: 978-3-031-25713-1. NO Producción Científica DS UVaDOC RD 04-jul-2024