Medellín
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About This Book
In the early nineties, the Colombian city of Medellín was considered one of the most insecure and violent places in the world, marked by an absence of the State in large areas and the conquest of those territories by the Medellín Cartel. Twenty-five years later, it receives international recognitions such as the Veronica Rudge Green Prize for Urban Design of Harvard University 2013 for the interventions carried out in the informal peripheries of the city, and the title of "most innovative city in the world" within the framework of the City of the Year contest, by The Wall Street Journal and Citigroup. This transformation process is recognized for its powerful architectural and urban operations in informal areas such as library parks, educational, sports and mobility facilities of great international visibility, developed within the framework of a set of transformations of political decentralization, institutional innovation, reformulation of territorial planning instruments and rearticulation between the academic world and the world of government, all of which contributes to the "non-visible face" of an urban transformation.
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