Revista AOA_49

S Vista aérea de las etapas I, II y III de la Ermita desde el Cerro 18 de Lo Barnechea. Se puede ver el proyecto en su conjunto S Aerial view of stages I, II, and III of Ermita from Cerro 18 de Lo Barnechea. The entire project can be seen.

el que definió que la estrategia para intervenir el barrio de manera integral debía ejecutarse en cuatro fases, las cuales son: - Fase 0: Preparación e inserción en el territorio. - Fase 1: Elaboración del diagnóstico integrado. - Fase 2: Diseño y elaboración del plan maestro de regeneración. - Fase 3: Ejecución de las obras, evaluación y cierre. Estas fases de trabajo de intervención territorial surgen a partir de la adecuación a la lógica muni- cipal de la “Guía metodológica para diagnósticos de conjuntos habitacionales” que el MINVU pu- blicó durante el 2020 y que permitió, a partir de experiencia comprobada, abordar el desafío de generar una regeneración urbana en un barrio desde el liderazgo municipal.

initiated that over time became the Las Ermitas I, II and III housing complexes and the Bicentenario housing complex. Stages I, II, and III of Las Ermitas were designed by Undurraga Devés Arquitectos and the Bicen- tenario stage was designed by Elemental. A total of 1,441 homes make up the neighborhood, which is classified into four typologies of single-family homes and apartments in blocks. The neighbor- hood extends along the southern bank of the Mapocho River between the Quinchamalí pe- destrian bridge and the La Dehesa bridge; there is also a 6.2-hectare park that accompanies the neighborhood´s development and is designed as a river bank, providing the neighborhood with a large consolidated green area. In 1998, the first stage of housing was delivered, and the housing complex was completed with the

Development Policy in 2014, and the accelerated deterioration of the Las Ermitas neighborhood in the Lo Barnechea community, which has con- vinced the current Mayor Cristóbal Lira's admin- istration to initiate an unprecedented process at a local level to lead an urban renovation of all its areas from a municipal management perspective. Lo Barnechea has had a history of commit- ment to developing social housing projects for its neighbors within the same community and has been one of the few places in the eastern sector of Santiago where camp settlements have been the norm over eradication to more distant sectors of the city. This is how this neighborhood arose in the mid-'90s, where in a joint effort between the Ministry of Housing and Urbanism (MINVU), the Lo Barnechea Municipality, and the San José de La Dehesa Foundation, a camp settlement was

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