Being very very proud of their neat and preserved historical city, the people of Varaždin love stories about the pink facades of baroque palaces in the historic city centre. But they rarely or never notice buildings from the twentieth century and ask themselves about their story.
Driving a car from Vienna, Warsaw or Budapest to the Adriatic coast in Croatia will also take you to Varaždin, a city nested in a super safe central European environment with its fifty thousand inhabitants. Daily routine of those inhabitants includes drinking endless coffees, going to work from 7 - 15, walking by the river Drava, going to the market (Saturday obligatory) and never resenting anyone. Varaždin is too often called Little Vienna, but it has – like many other cities - more modern stories it can offer to its inhabitants and visitors.
Baroque ego of the city and the urban challenge
The identity and the ego of Varaždin are strongly wrapped around historical baroque architectural heritage from the time when the city was shortly a capital of Croatia in the 18th century. But in reality, Varaždin is not only a baroque city. It started to create its urban pattern in the middle ages which is rarely mentioned in the stories of citizens. Twentieth-century gave mesmerizing intelligent buildings citizens are not aware of as valuable heritage. Is this something we should fix?
F
The answer to that question came to Varaždin in the fall of 2018 when for the first time we have encountered the Urbact III Come in! transfer network. Varaždin vice mayor was invited by the National Urbact point to join the second phase of the project led by Budapest district 11 Újbuda, transferring
Our task was to transfer the good practice of Budapest100 by organizing the community festival which would promote the importance of certain buildings and involve the tenants with their stories about the buildings they live in. The project was supposed to reduce social isolation by inviting neighbours and citizens to talk about their buildings and get acquainted with each other and with buildings they had not paid attention to before.
O
Beginning of the project
Come in! was not a difficult project, we were not developing strategic changes or planning wavering actions. We just wanted to tell the story about architecture and the way of life in Đurek, a residential neighbourhood from the sixties. Built in the era of modern urban planning, Đurek was and still is a bright example of a healthy, rational and functional neighbourhood with quality flats where people still gladly move and live. Close to the city centre, but far from that historical ambience.
O
Dissonance is in the air
As the project developed it became obvious that some obstacles awaited us along the way. The dissonance firstly mentioned by our lead expert in the context of historical versus contemporary built heritage has quickly replicated to two other fields we did not think about earlier. We had architecture through the eyes of experts versus architecture through the eyes of a layman. We had a bottom-up concept within a top-down structure (project run by the municipality). The bottom-up concept needed volunteers that will design a community festival in an ex-socialist country that has very limited culture in that regard.
Pilot festivals, treasure hunting and Urbact Local Group meetings
H
Our partners had organized pilot festivals that we visited, and it was a huge help. We learned they were facing similar challenges, such as communication between different stakeholders, finding people who will tell stories or organizing the festival in overall, visitors entering the buildings in a peaceful neighbourhood. During those visits, we have strengthened our original idea that the festival must be stretched throughout the neighbourhood and connected by different carefully scheduled events.
One of the positive breaking points was the realization by the end of the year 2019 that our volunteers became a firm group of 15-20 people who were modestly doing their tasks. The key was, as it turned out, to engage a small number of interested people who are leaders of a bigger group instead
Festival at the time of pandemic
The planned festival day arrived in a super sunny and warm way in April, but the festival location was empty: Covid-19 lockdown was in progress, and the festival was postponed. The whole concept and the sudden change of the transfer process were surreal, and we adapted to the new way of managing things. We set the new date in October. Until the last moment, we did not know at all whether we will do it or not. As the global Covid situation was getting worse again, we knew it might be now or never, and decided to go for it. We simplified and reduced the program and adapted it to relatively light epidemiological measures. To our great sorrow, it was obvious that the festival is going to happen without our Urbact Come in! partners.
Beautiful, sunny October 10th 2020
Finally,
"It is better to be approximately right than exactly wrong"
, claims author C. Read. I was completely wrong when at the end of September 2020, I rooted for postponing the festival out of fear and unwillingness to give up on the original concept. Apart from the described benefits of the festival, this was also a micro lesson about resilience and instant decision making in spite of the unknown outcome. Humans are adaptive, and if you bravely act you will bravely harvest, not just in terms of our last decision to hold the festival in October. Throughout the process, we managed to minimize our worries and go with the flow but still remained focused on instructions, protocols and plans during the entire journey. Dissonant built heritage came few steps closer to the residents of Varaždin. Volunteers formed a strong integrated group. Architects and residents found a common language and learnt to talk to each other and to others about dissonant architecture. The vice mayor created a sparkle of a bottom-up city glow by leaving it to the volunteers to organize this small city festival on their own.
Plans for the future
The arrival
Transfer story written by Maja Kireta, ULG COORDINATOR for the City of Varaždin, cartoons by ida isteR
Epilogue
Social isolation is a challenge of modern communities that finds solutions through various actions. At first glance, promotion of 20th-century architecture and socializing of neighbours Martina, Margareta and Renata on the fourth floor of an elevator-free building from the sixties seem to have nothing to do with each other. This is the moment when we use the Come in! project to cross the usual limit of perception of these two topics. If our three ladies instead of the usual talk about the market, grandchildren and houseplants after the Đurek community festival proudly raise the topic about the architectural value of the building in which they live, we made a shift towards awareness of twentieth century-built heritage. We gave them a reason to step out of their comfort zone, create new social connections and learn.