Promenada | Enota

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Promenada | Enota

Information

  • Project Name: Promenada
  • Practice: ENOTA
  • Completion year: 2014
  • Gross Built up Area: 17,020 m2
  • Project Location: Velenje
  • Country: Slovenia
  • Design Team: Dean Lah, Milan Tomac, Tjaž Bauer, Andrej Oblak, Polona Ruparčič, Nuša Završnik Šilec, Alja Černe, Nebojša Vertovšek
  • Clients: Velenje Municipality
  • Structural Consultants: Elea iC
  • MEP Consultants: Nom biro
  • Photo Credits: Miran Kambič
  • Others: electrical planning: Elsing
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Excerpt: Promenada, an urban design project by Enota, aims to revitalize the city center by providing missing programs and restoring its town-in-a-park character. The renovation transformed the straight connection into a sequence of micro-ambients, featuring widened surfaces connected by a twisting path. These widening squares feature attractive concrete urban elements, providing focus and framing the space for additional program content.

Project Description

Promenada | Enota
© branko & nik navršnik
Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič

[Text as submitted by architect] The Velenje “Promenada” is an important city space and a vital city thoroughfare. It is one of the central axes of the centre of Velenje, a young town designed in the 1950s, based on the Modernist ideal of the garden city; as such, it is unique in the Slovene space. The renovation of the Promenada represents the first step towards the gradual revitalisation of the city centre. Its tasks are to supply the city with the missing programmes and to help it reclaim its original character of a town-in-a-park. A successful renovation, informed by the awareness of the excessive surfaces designated for traffic, must bring together two requirements seemingly at odds with each other: “More greenery and more programme.”

Promenada | Enota
© Enota
Promenada | Enota
© Enota

Also the existing promenade was created by closing the erstwhile traffic road almost thirty years ago. Even though it was re-paved, a sufficiently thorough transformation never took place and the promenade has retained the character of a road, remaining too wide and rather dull due to the lack of content. It has been a kind of hybrid space between the road and the surface intended for pedestrians – chiefly a straight path quickly leading the users of the secondary-school complex and the community health centre to the inner centre without providing any animation for those out for a walk.

Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič
Promenada | Enota
Master Plan © Enota
Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič

Through renovation, the wide straight connection with a clearly delineated beginning and termination underwent a transformation into a kind of sequence of micro-ambients, of locally widened surfaces connected by a slightly twisting narrower path. These instances of widening (in effect squares) feature attractive concrete urban elements (benches) whose careful arrangement slows down the users and provides focus, framing the space for the additional programme content to take place.

Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič
Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič

As the path locally twists along the surrounding buildings, it gives rise to larger contained open spaces, allowing future expansion of the content from the buildings outwards, or the accommodation of other additional content as required over time. In the initial phase, all these newly-formed public spaces are simply and cost-effectively laid out as sand or grass surfaces, with sand surfaces in particular representing a successful middle ground between grass and paved city spaces and allowing a wide range of use with only modest investment.

Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič
Promenada | Enota
© Enota
Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič

With the transformation, the Promenada is turning into a main event axis of the city, its centre being placed into the new amphitheatre along the river. The river Paka is a torrential river, which means that its watercourse swells up significantly a few times a year, but remains relatively shallow at all other times. As a consequence, the riverbed is very deep and until now, the river, which is an attractive element of any city, flowed out of sight somewhere down below. 

Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič
Promenada | Enota
© Miran Kambič

The wide bridge also meant that anyone walking across it had a hard time seeing the river at all. By narrowing the bridge and placing it off the former axis, the space for the construction of an amphitheatre, which slowly slopes down towards the river surface, is recovered. The attractive amphitheatre by the river, with the new bridge serving as its backdrop, becomes the centre of the activity in the city, and the river may once again claim an important spot in the townspeople’s consciousness.

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