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	<title>Metropolitics</title>
	<link>https://metropolitics.org/</link>
	<description>Favoriser les d&#233;bats et confronter les savoirs et les savoir-faire sur la ville, l'architecture et les territoires.</description>
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		<title>Underground Berlin: Where Infrastructure Meets Politics</title>
		<link>https://metropolitics.org/Underground-Berlin-Where-Infrastructure-Meets-Politics.html</link>
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		<dc:date>2022-12-02T06:00:00Z</dc:date>
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		<dc:language>en</dc:language>
		<dc:creator> Clarence Hatton-Proulx &amp; translated by Oliver Waine</dc:creator>


		<dc:subject>Berlin</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>infrastructure</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>Germany</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>energy</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>history</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>networks</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>urban technical networks</dc:subject>
		<dc:subject>utilities</dc:subject>

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&lt;p&gt;Water, electricity, gas: in Remaking Berlin, Timothy Moss presents a history of Berlin's infrastructure networks from 1920 to 2020, and shows how their operation has varied with successive political regimes. &lt;br class='autobr' /&gt; For anyone interested in the history of cities, the case of Berlin is particularly rich. In less than a century, the German capital lived through a succession of different political regimes: the Weimar Republic, Nazi rule, the division of the city between two concomitant republics (one&lt;/p&gt;


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