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Others: Gentrification with Chinese characteristics? on Shanghai’s city center transformations

TitleGentrification with Chinese characteristics? on Shanghai’s city center transformations
Authors
KeywordsArchitecture
Creative incubation
Gentrifciation
Post-socialist urban transformation
Shanghai
Transnational networks
Urban development
Issue Date2013
PublisherFaculty of Architecture, The University of Hong Kong.
Citation
HKUSSC Spring Lecture Series: The Next Decade, Hong Kong, China, 4 March 2013 How to Cite?
AbstractSince Shanghai became the “dragon’s head,” its city center neighborhoods underwent tremendous transformations. Focusing on the western end of the French concession that largely survived (so far) the ongoing demolition-and-reconstruction cycle, this talk will unpack how the transformations in the urban fabric is embedded in its recent historic legacies, as well as how its global aspirations are specifically inflected by local frameworks. Not as eye catching as the towers that rise to echo GDP growth or the satellite towns, international schools and shopping malls that epitomize the former colonial metropolis’ re-globalization, the role for the centrality seem to remain important to the future development of the metropolis, despite its shifting identity. The presiding forces, including governance structures and public-private alliances that mediate the stakes for heritage, housing, and commerce, are crucial for strategies of future development of not only Chinese cities, but of historic city centers in developing economies undergoing accelerated structural change.
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/222213

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorZhou, Y-
dc.date.accessioned2016-01-06T04:13:31Z-
dc.date.available2016-01-06T04:13:31Z-
dc.date.issued2013-
dc.identifier.citationHKUSSC Spring Lecture Series: The Next Decade, Hong Kong, China, 4 March 2013-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/222213-
dc.description.abstractSince Shanghai became the “dragon’s head,” its city center neighborhoods underwent tremendous transformations. Focusing on the western end of the French concession that largely survived (so far) the ongoing demolition-and-reconstruction cycle, this talk will unpack how the transformations in the urban fabric is embedded in its recent historic legacies, as well as how its global aspirations are specifically inflected by local frameworks. Not as eye catching as the towers that rise to echo GDP growth or the satellite towns, international schools and shopping malls that epitomize the former colonial metropolis’ re-globalization, the role for the centrality seem to remain important to the future development of the metropolis, despite its shifting identity. The presiding forces, including governance structures and public-private alliances that mediate the stakes for heritage, housing, and commerce, are crucial for strategies of future development of not only Chinese cities, but of historic city centers in developing economies undergoing accelerated structural change.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.languagechi-
dc.publisherFaculty of Architecture, The University of Hong Kong.-
dc.relation.ispartofSpring Lecture Series: The Next Decade-
dc.subjectArchitecture-
dc.subjectCreative incubation-
dc.subjectGentrifciation-
dc.subjectPost-socialist urban transformation-
dc.subjectShanghai-
dc.subjectTransnational networks-
dc.subjectUrban development-
dc.titleGentrification with Chinese characteristics? on Shanghai’s city center transformations-
dc.typeOthers-
dc.identifier.emailZhou, Y: yingzhou@alumni.princeton.edu-
dc.identifier.authorityZhou, Y=rp02115-
dc.publisher.placeHong Kong-

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