Neoliberal Lakeside Residentialism: Real Estate Development and the Sustainable Utopia in Environmentally Fragile Areas
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Conceptual Framework
2.1. The Nature-Tourism Fit
2.2. The Shoreline Industry and Production of the City
2.3. Is It Simply a Problem of Use Value Versus Exchange Value?
- (a)
- Tourism spaces generate a portrait effect: they package a landscape configured by natural and socio-cultural site conditions (morphology, hydrography, vegetation, fauna, historical populations, indigenous cultures), without renouncing the use condition beyond the path of its own history. The commercial groups interested in these spaces generate a hedonic projection of their use value, offering the experience of sharing a part of that packaged landscape, but within a pre-established framework in which the natural world is limited and delimited according to subjective boundaries.
- (b)
- A second critical level can be added to exchange value, in which demand for subsidised housing cannot be satisfied. The location of tourist cities on lake shores, a morphology that defines their expansion dynamics, does not erase obligations to those inhabitants deprived of housing. In Latin America, the right to housing remains a complex subject in terms of both discussion and resolution. In the cases of Brazil and Argentina, for example, the property access model is similar to that operating in Chile, with housing allocation based on socio-economic vulnerability [44]. In Ecuador, successive governments have promoted subsidy-based opportunities such that remittances sent home by Ecuadorians living abroad are directed towards housing acquisition, while in Colombia, the selection criteria include rural people displaced by guerrilla and drug-related conflict [45,46]. All of these are metropolitan solutions that address a dimension of the right to housing but are not suited to the issue of residential demand in tourism spaces.
- (c)
- Interaction between real estate operations and nature always leads to exclusion. Residential projects such as apartment blocks, leisure plots or condominiums are designed to increase proximity to the lake shore, in some cases preventing the free access to water bodies that should be guaranteed in accordance with their normative definition as public goods. If real estate development bears any specific weight within the production of exchange value, this is brought to an end with the sale of an entire project, many of which contain up to 200 apartment units. The accumulation of residential clusters of this type has two critical effects: complete exclusion of the right to housing from any form of integration involving shared use of the water body; and the rendering of sustainability an impossible criterion under regimes of exclusionary occupation of the shoreline. Sustainability tends to lead to the formation of complex systems—rather than simply promoting recycling—because it constitutes a larger act of organic solidarity involving the spatial integration of class and rights. In cases such as Barcelona, the price friction triggered by the tourist accommodation market affect productive matrices that had remained robust prior to the 2008 real estate crisis, rendering the relationship of proximity between homes and the shoreline a topological asset in its own right [47].
3. Methodology
3.1. Phase 1: Geohistorical Overview of the Study Area
3.2. Phase 2: Real Estate Data Collection
3.3. Phase 3: Assessment of Environmental Effects
4. Empirical Results
4.1. Real Estate Development in Pucón and Villarrica
4.2. Modelling the Lakeside Phenomenon at the Virtual Scale
4.3. Assessment of the Environmental Impacts of Neoliberal Lakeside Residentialism
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Locality | Area (Hectares) | Built Area (Hectares) 2002–2017 | Growth | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2002 | 2006 | 2011 | 2017 | 2002–2017 | ||
Pucón | 389.4 | 412 | 434 | 771.4 | 382 | 98.1% |
Villarrica | 469.7 | 508.7 | 555.3 | 681.4 | 211 | 45.1% |
Araucanía Region | 11,228.9 | 12,644.7 | 13,777.2 | 15,566.4 | 4337.5 | 38.6% |
District | 1992 | 2002 | 2017 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Population | Housing | Population | Housing | Population | Housing | |
Pucón | 14,356 | 4886 | 21,107 | 9494 | 28,523 | 17,357 |
Villarrica | 35,867 | 10,356 | 45,531 | 17,352 | 55,478 | 28,289 |
Districts | Number of Homes Built 2017–2021 | Total Homes, Census 2017 | % Homes Incorporated into Existing Housing Stock 2017–2021 |
---|---|---|---|
Temuco | 15,015 | 91,687 | 16.4% |
Villarrica | 4047 | 18,256 | 22.1% |
Pucón | 3003 | 9261 | 32.4% |
Parameter | Unit | Criterion | Quality standard | Pucón Lake Shore | La Poza, Pucón | Compliance Level |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clarity (Secchi) | m | 6-month average | ≥7 | 7.5 | 7 | Over 80% |
Minimum | ≥4 | 4.5 | 5 | |||
Chlorophyll “a” | µg/L | 6-month average | ≤5 | 7.7 | 7.3 | Result above standard |
Maximum | ≤10 | 14.8 | 13.2 | |||
Dissolved phosphorus (P) | Mg P/L | 6-month average | ≤0.015 | N/A | N/A | Regulatory compliance |
Maximum | ≤0.025 | 0.020 | 0.030 |
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Hidalgo, R.; Robles, M.S.; Alvarado, V. Neoliberal Lakeside Residentialism: Real Estate Development and the Sustainable Utopia in Environmentally Fragile Areas. Land 2022, 11, 1309. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081309
Hidalgo R, Robles MS, Alvarado V. Neoliberal Lakeside Residentialism: Real Estate Development and the Sustainable Utopia in Environmentally Fragile Areas. Land. 2022; 11(8):1309. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081309
Chicago/Turabian StyleHidalgo, Rodrigo, María Sarella Robles, and Voltaire Alvarado. 2022. "Neoliberal Lakeside Residentialism: Real Estate Development and the Sustainable Utopia in Environmentally Fragile Areas" Land 11, no. 8: 1309. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081309
APA StyleHidalgo, R., Robles, M. S., & Alvarado, V. (2022). Neoliberal Lakeside Residentialism: Real Estate Development and the Sustainable Utopia in Environmentally Fragile Areas. Land, 11(8), 1309. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11081309