
| Housing and Environment - Report of the Vienna Workshop (HABITAT, 1999, 394 p.) |
| (introduction...) |
| Foreword |
| Acknowledgment |
| About the contributors |
| Executive summary |
| Editor's note |
| Statement of the Workshop |
| Part A - Theme 1: The role of the private sector in housing supply |
![]() | Background paper No. 1: The role of the private sector in housing supply |
![]() | Housing in Moldova: The role of the private sector in housing supply and improvement |
![]() | The role of the private sector in housing development in Poland |
![]() | Restructuring problems of private building sector and its housing production in Slovakia |
![]() | Housing reform and the private construction sector in Russia |
![]() | State housing policy and the private sector |
![]() | The role of the private sector in Swedish housing: Transition from supply-oriented to market-oriented housing |
![]() | The role of the private sector in housing supply and renewal |
![]() | Housing supply in Poland: Private sector in the real estate market |
![]() | The role of the private sector in housing construction |
![]() | Housing in Bulgaria: Public/private partnership, problems and opportunities |
![]() | Housing in Slovakia: The role of the private sector |
| Part B - Theme 2: Environment-friendly construction practices |
![]() | Background paper No. 2: Environment-friendly construction practices |
![]() | Environmental aspects of housing in Uzbekistan: Past, present and future |
![]() | Housing in Moldova: Environmentally sound construction practices |
![]() | Enviro Board: An innovative fiberboard technology |
![]() | Current situation of recycling of building materials in Austria |
![]() | Possibilities of using recycled brick as concrete aggregate |
![]() | Improving environmental performance of residential buildings by quality competition on public subsidies: The Viennese model |
![]() | Housing in Latvia |
![]() | The housing problems in Latvia and their ecological and economical solutions |
![]() | Small-scale manufacture of ecomaterials as a powerful tool for decentralization: A sustainable approach |
![]() | Sustainable construction: A new approach for the 21st century |
![]() | Ecological optimization of residential buildings in Vienna |
![]() | Development of energy-efficient and environmentally-sound housing in Russia |
![]() | Ecologically oriented construction practices in Ukraine |
![]() | Towards healthy and environmentally sound architecture |
![]() | Environment - friendly housing construction in Belarus |
![]() | Greening the housing sector in Poland: Looking for a new deal |
![]() | Passive solar housing architecture |
![]() | Construction and environment in Albania |
![]() | Housing and ecology: The Swedish experience |
| Part C - General papers |
![]() | Achievements and shortfalls of the post-war reconstruction in Bosnia and Herzegovina |
![]() | The importance of cooperatives in the Spanish housing market |
![]() | Low-income housing: The perspective of the Croatian transition economy |
![]() | Information supply for the construction and housing sector |
![]() | Sustainable Urban Renewal in Vienna |
![]() | More construction for the money: Applying lean principles to building |
![]() | Housing policy of Kazakhstan in the transition period |
![]() | Housing privatization in the Baltic States |
![]() | The role of the State in housing provision |
![]() | Housing in Ukraine |
![]() | Housing problems and environment-friendly construction: Lithuanian case |
![]() | Housing in Tartu, Estonia |
![]() | Transfer of selected housing research results to the central and eastern European countries |
![]() | Management of housing: The experience of Aizkraukle town, Latvia |
![]() | Total life analysis, modeling and forecasting of housing industry in Lithuania |
| Annexes |
![]() | Annex I: List of participants |
![]() | Annex II: Regional Workshop |
![]() | Annex III: Guide for the preparation of papers |
| Back cover |