In the post-industrial era, abandoned industrial areas have become problematic and depressed areas in many cities, as well as strategically important points for the potential development of urban infrastructure. In this article, the author examines the experience of revitalizing industrial landscapes into modern public spaces, urban parks, and museum territories. The article highlights the need to transform former industrial areas to improve the quality of life for citizens and develop urban infrastructure. It also explores the concept of "industrial landscape" in architectural and landscape practices. The article analyzes six completed projects and identifies the main principles of revitalization of industrial landscapes: preservation of valuable architectural and landscape objects, creation of a unique symbolic image of the area based on the emphasis of visual and semantic dominants, development of a functional and transport-pedestrian scheme for the transformed area, taking into account various scenarios of use, improvement of the environmental conditions of the area, and justification of the economic feasibility of the transformations through the maximum possible use of the preserved historical environment. The practice of transforming and sustainably developing industrial landscapes provides a basis for developing and using new approaches and methods for working with historical industrial areas to address identification, urban planning, architectural and planning, environmental, and economic challenges.
S. Tkachenko (Tue,) studied this question.