ABSTRACT

Making Prestigious Places investigates the spatial dimension of luxury, both as a sector involving activities, operators and investments, and as a system of values acting as a catalyst for recent urban transformations. Luxury shares a well-established connection to the city, as a place of production, consumption and self-representation, and continues to grow despite economic difficulties. This edited collection includes case studies from Europe, North and South America, Asia and the Middle East to create a dialogue around these developments and the challenges presented, such as the tension between the idea of prestige and current values in urban planning, the discussion between academic reflections and operational practices, and how these interact with the long-term economic and social dynamic of the city. With rich analysis and a preface written by Patsy Healey, this book will be an important addition to the discourse on luxury for urban planners and researchers.

chapter |20 pages

From luxury to prestigious place-making

An overview

part I|71 pages

Concepts

chapter 1|11 pages

Luxury

From the idea to the reality of prestigious places

chapter 2|23 pages

Two geographies of luxury projects

Opportunities, risks and challenges for public policies

chapter 3|13 pages

Experiencing prestigious places

Contemporary forms and modalities

chapter 4|8 pages

Walking as a luxury activity

chapter 5|11 pages

Contemporary art and urban attractiveness

The role of hypermuseums and art foundations

part II|75 pages

Reflections

chapter 6|17 pages

Prestige and luxury

Places of urbanity in paramount locations

chapter 7|16 pages

The city as a playground

How luxury players adapt their actions to local situations

chapter 8|17 pages

Placemaking or making places?

Ambiguity of luxury and the design of urban public spaces

chapter 9|14 pages

Luxury and the metropolis

Towards a reciprocal definition?