ABSTRACT

A common theme running through both the market economies of Western Europe and the old command economies of Eastern Europe is the desire to combine local economic development objectives with those of the international investor. It is in this context that the interaction between planning systems and property markets is of paramount importance.

part |1 pages

PART ONE EUROPEAN HEARTLAND

chapter 2|29 pages

London

chapter 3|15 pages

Amsterdam

ByBarrie Needham and Johan van de Ven

chapter 4|17 pages

Brussels

chapter 5|20 pages

Düsseldorf

chapter 6|17 pages

Paris

part |1 pages

PART TWO NORTHERN EUROPE

chapter 7|17 pages

Helsinki

BySeppo Laakso, Olli Keinänen

chapter 8|23 pages

Stockholm

chapter 9|14 pages

Copenhagen

chapter 10|17 pages

Edinburgh

ByGreg Lloyd, Stuart Black

chapter 11|23 pages

Dublin

part |1 pages

PART THREE SOUTHERN EUROPE

chapter 12|24 pages

Barcelona

ByPere Riera, Geoffrey Keogh

chapter 13|13 pages

Rome

ByLorenzo Bellicini, Francesco Toso

chapter 14|29 pages

Athens

part |1 pages

PART FOUR EASTERN EUROPE

chapter 15|30 pages

Budapest

ByBarry Redding, Ali R. Ghanbari Parsa

chapter 16|24 pages

Prague

chapter 17|26 pages

Warsaw

chapter 18|24 pages

Berlin

chapter 19|14 pages

Property, planning and European progress