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Time & Society | 2015

Urban rhythms: A chronotopic approach to urban timespace

Ondřej Mulíček; Robert Osman; Daniel Seidenglanz

This text attempts to examine the structuring of the urban environment, taking into account the geographically traditional spatial aspects of various phenomena as well as their temporal characteristics. Places are anchored in time and time in turn may be said to unfold in space. It is thus impossible to achieve an understanding of space without the necessary temporal dimension; indeed, the debate over the conceptualization of timespace has gained considerable currency in the social sciences. This text forms a response to this point of interest, providing a discussion of the chronotopic approach. The first part examines the concept of time and timespace, respectively, in the social sciences; particular attention is paid to the non-trivial aspects of the relationship between time and space. The abovementioned chronotope analytical and interpretive model is utilized throughout. For the purposes of this article, the model is defined as a specific part of the urban space defined by a unique temporality, i.e. based on a specific combination of overlapping rhythms. Such an approach opens up the possibility of regionalization on the basis of a specific temporality on different spatial scales. The empirical part of the text attempts to characterize the differentiation of urban space in Brno on the basis of a spectral analysis of three selected rhythms – the work cycle of a given locale, average duration of shopping session and public transport frequency. Model cases of selected urban chronotopes are subsequently developed on the basis of the rhythmicity of these activities.


Review of Economic Perspectives | 2014

Comparison of Urban and Suburban Rail Transport in Germany and in the Czech Republic

Daniel Seidenglanz; Filip Chvátal; Katerina Nedvedová

Abstract Rail transport is an environmentally friendly form of passenger transport which can be utilized effectively also in urban and suburban transport systems. The paper describes the urban and suburban rail transport system including comparison of selected Czech (Prague, Brno and Ostrava) and German metropolitan regions (Munich, Nuremberg and Dresden). Its aim is to analyze the importance of various factors influencing the differences between the situation in Germany and in the Czech Republic. Therefore, the research question is whether these differences are primarily caused by a different liberalization stage, or whether they are a result of other factors such as available infrastructure, investment level, rail transport services budget, structure and activity of ordering bodies and coordinators or geographical context. The supply of city and suburban rail transport is quite good in Germany and in the Czech Republic, although trains in Munich, Nuremberg and Dresden run more frequently, faster and are better interconnected with car transport. German rail transport sector is at a higher stage of liberalization, and tendering procedures are the preferred selection method for contractor carriers. However, a degree of liberalization of the railway sector is not the key marker indicating a better standard of urban and suburban rail transport in Germany because it is the high standard which is achieved as the consequence of the professional activity of the ordering bodies and train service coordinators in combination with geographical conditions, available financial sources and effective transport infrastructure. On the other hand, the importance of liberalization cannot be totally overlooked as tenders are a tool for the ordering bodies to strongly affect the price and quality of transport services in their area. The supply of better quality and attractive transport to passengers could increase the usage of rail transport in metropolitan regions and could have indirect but important socio-economic impacts


Review of Economic Perspectives | 2015

Regional Railway Transport in Czech, Austrian and German Decentralised and Regionalised Transport Markets

Daniel Seidenglanz; Tomáš Nigrin; Jiří Dujka

Abstract The article analyses railway transport markets in three neighbouring Central European countries: the Czech Republic, Austria and Germany (specifically Bavaria and Saxony), with a focus on regional transportation. It examines the organisational form of public transport resulting from regionalisation and provides comparative case studies of regional train services in these countries. The article points out the organisational differences in public transportation between the studied regions and tries to connect these results with the supply of regional train services on various types of lines and in different geographical areas.


Environment and Planning A | 2016

Time–space rhythms of the city—The industrial and postindustrial Brno

Ondřej Mulíček; Robert Osman; Daniel Seidenglanz

This paper examines the transformation of the postindustrial city in terms of its temporal structure. It takes concepts of time geography, routine, and rhythmicity of the classic Lund school, Lefebvre’s analysis of rhythms, and Crang’s geographic application of the chronotope concept as its starting points. Analyzing changes in the city bus transport services in Brno between 1989 and 2009, the paper attempts to capture in empirical terms the onset of the postindustrial phase of the city’s development. While temporality of an industrial city can be characterized by a shared rhythm determined by a small number of dominant pacemakers (industrial plants), the deindustrialized city is associated with a significant weakening of such pacemakers cutting across the society and thus with a distinctive individualization of urban rhythmicity.


Archive | 2013

Modely a metody regulace konkurenčního prostředí na trhuželezničních dopravních služeb.

Martin Kvizda; Zdeněk Tomeš; Jaroslav Bil; Vladimír Hajko; Tomáš Houška; Filip Chvátal; Ondřej Krčál; Michal Kvasnička; Kateřina Nedvědová; Daniel Němec; Tomáš Nigrin; Václav Rederer; Daniel Seidenglanz; Rostislav Staněk

Kniha podava souhrnný přehled o soucasnem stavu teoretickeho poznani a modelovani v oblasti fungovani a regulace intermodalni a intramodalni konkurence na trhu železnicnich dopravnich služeb s důrazem na evropske realie a o metodach detekce poruseni regulacnich pravidel a možnostech aplikace napravných opatřeni. Kapitoly obsahuji komentovaný souhrn teoretických konceptů dane problematiky založený na resersi publikovaných odborných textů a přiklady využiti popisovaných metod na zakladě vlastniho výzkumu autorů knihy. Prvni kapitola se zabýva soucasným stavem teoretickeho poznani v oblasti zavaděni konkurence na evropských, původně statnich, monopolnich trzich železnicni dopravy a dale praktickou implementaci železnicnich reforem v clenských zemich EU. Druha kapitola shrnuje kvantitativni techniky použitelne pro empiricke zkoumani stavu a intenzity konkurence na železnici a modelovani poptavky po železnicni dopravě; v zavěrecne casti kapitoly je provedena komparativni analýza jednotlivých modelových přistupů na zakladě dat evropských železnicnich dopravců. Ve třeti kapitole jsou představeny mikroekonomicke přistupy k modelovani struktury odvětvi železnicni dopravy, cenove regulaci a investic do infrastruktury s aplikaci statickeho a dynamickeho efektu režimů regulace. Ctvrta kapitola popisuje metody vymezovani relevantniho trhu na zakladě SSNIP testu, cenových testů, analýzy kriticke ztraty a spotřebitelských setřeni a analyzuje specifika tzv. bidding markets; v zavěru kapitoly je provedena prakticka aplikace vymezeni relevantniho trhu v osobni železnicni dopravě. Pata kapitola se zabýva geografickými přistupy k modelovani železnicniho dopravniho trhu a aplikaci geograficke metody vymezeni relevantniho trhu. Posledni, sesta kapitola dava přehled o využiti dřive popsaných metod ve skutecných postupech soutěžnich autorit ve vzorových zemich Velke Britanii a Německu a o aplikaci soutěžni politiky Evropskou komisi.


Review of Economic Perspectives | 2015

Standards of Transport Services - Central Strategy versus Regional Priorities - Workshop Report of the 9th Telč Seminar

Martin Kvizda; Tomáš Nigrin; Daniel Seidenglanz; Zdeněk Tomeš

On a traditional autumn date, 6 and 7 November 2014, the Department of Economics at the Faculty of Economics and Administration of the Masaryk University in Brno in cooperation with the Institute of International Studies of the Faculty of Social Sciences of the Charles University in Prague (both Czech Republic) organized 9th Telc Seminar, which took place in the University Centre of the Masaryk University in Telc (Czech Republic). The main topic of the seminar, supported by a grant by Technology Agency of the Czech Republic, was Standards of Transport Services – Central Strategy versus Regional Priorities. The second part of the seminar consisted of a panel discussion aimed at defining standards of regional transport; moderated by Martin Kvizda and Daniel Seidenglanz (both Masaryk University Brno) and featured Miroslav Marada (Charles University Prague; focusing on transport geography), Petr Psenicka (SŽDC - Railway Infrastructure Administration), Lumir Pecený (University of Žilina; focusing on transport engineering), and Tomas Pospisil (CD – Czech Railways Inc.). As a follow-up of a foregoing discussion, several basic issues were opened which gave rise to a lively discussion in which not only panel speakers engaged, but other participants in the seminar, too: Which type of transport needs should be serviced by subsidized regional transport? What should be the spatial definition of regional transport? Which is the optimum temporal standard of regional transport? What does a suitable party ordering regional transport look like? How to co-ordinate regional transport with its long-distance counterpart?


Research in Transportation Economics | 2014

Competition in the railway passenger market in the Czech Republic

Zdeněk Tomeš; Martin Kvizda; Tomáš Nigrin; Daniel Seidenglanz


Archive | 2007

Vybrané přírodní extrémy a jejich dopady na Moravě a ve Slezsku

Rudolf Brázdil; Ladislav Březina; Petr Dobrovolný; Martin Dubrovský; Olga Halásová; Jiří Hostýnek; Kateřina Chromá; Jana Janderková; Zdeněk Kaláb; Kateřina Keprtová; Karel Kirchner; Oldřich Kotyza; Oldřich Krejčí; Josef Kunc; Jan Lacina; Zdeněk Lepka; Aleš Létal; Jarmila Macková; Zdeněk Máčka; Ondřej Mulíček; Pavel Roštínský; Tomáš Řehánek; Daniel Seidenglanz; Daniela Semerádová; Zbyněk Sokol; Eva Soukalová; Josef Štekl; Miroslav Trnka; Hubert Valášek; Antonín Věžník


Archive | 2006

Atlas cestovního ruchu České republiky

Jiří Vystoupil; Andrea Holešinská; Josef Kunc; Jaroslav Maryáš; Daniel Seidenglanz; Martin Šauer; Petr Tonev; Milan Viturka


Archive | 2007

Dopravní charakteristiky venkovského prostoru

Daniel Seidenglanz

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Tomáš Nigrin

Charles University in Prague

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Josef Kunc

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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