ABSTRACT

Economic restructuring and demographic change have in recent years placed much strain on urban areas with the effects falling disproportionately on neighbourhoods that were previously underpinned by industry and manufacturing. This has presented policy makers and city planners with a binary choice: to resist change and stagnate or to change and attempt to keep up with the pace of global demand. This edited book tells the story of how urban transformation impacts on people’s lives and everyday interactions – to question where and to whom benefit accrues from these changes.

Urban Transformations offers insight into both risk and reward as local communities and public authorities creatively address the challenge of building vital and sustainable urban environments. The authors in this edited collection argue that understanding the specifics of community, space and place is crucial to delivering insights into how, where, when, why and for whom urban areas might successfully transform. The chapters investigate urban change using a range of approaches, and case studies from the four corners of the Earth – from the United States to Iran; from the United Kingdom to Canada. The varying scales at which governance or regeneration initiatives operate, the nature and composition of urban communities, and the local or global interests of different private sector actors all raise questions for urban policy and practice. It is important to not only consider the drivers of regeneration, but its beneficiaries need to be identified.

This edited volume addresses and elaborates on critical issues facing urban transformation and renewal as a basis for future discussion on strategies for ‘successful’ urban transformation.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

Geographies of renewal and creative change: assessing urban transformation

chapter 1|17 pages

Writing the past into the fabric of the present

Urban regeneration in Glasgow’s East End

chapter 2|15 pages

Urban regeneration in motion

The High Line as a travelling urban imaginary

chapter 3|19 pages

Urban revitalization in a neoliberal key

Brownfield redevelopment in Michigan

chapter 4|17 pages

The new main street

Planning, politics and change in downtown Kent, Ohio

chapter 5|18 pages

Beyond rail

Amenity driven high-density development for polycentric cities

chapter 6|18 pages

Creating third places

Ethnic retailing and place-making in metropolitan Toronto

chapter 8|15 pages

Urban renewal in Tehran’s neighbourhoods

Displacement or potential for identity-building and place-making?

chapter 9|29 pages

When community and condos collide

The uneven geographies of housing wealth in mixed-income neighbourhood transformation

chapter 10|18 pages

Examining the transformation of Regent Park, Toronto

Prioritizing hard and soft infrastructure

chapter 11|16 pages

Theorizing neighbourhood inequality

The things we do with theory, the things it does to us

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion

Research directions going forward