Vulnerated Urban Areas under Regeneration: Strategies to Prevent Neighborhood Expulsion in Barcelona or How to Improve without Expelling?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical and Analytical Framework
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results
4.1. Gentrification: Part of the Problem of Expulsion in Barcelona?
- Resident’s profile change
“Urbanism investment, in the end, is gentrifier itself. […] The administration is one of the main gentrifying agents” (Barcelona technician).
“Many very engaged female neighbors have encountered expulsion themselves at first hand, which made civic engagement strength to fade away” (Barceloneta entity).
- Commercial profile change
“The minute people with middle or high incomes arrive, this entails a whole new different type of economy takes place” (Besòs-Maresme entity).
4.1.1. “Visible” or Direct Displacement: Evictions
“An old lady living in a bank-owned apartment: in these cases, even politicians come help us stop the evictions” (Trinitat Vella entity).
“The existing support networks see themselves deteriorated because people are expelled, which complicates even more the associational life” (Barceloneta entity).
4.1.2. “Invisible” or Indirect Forms of Displacement
- Rise in rent prices
“The administration goes at a 10 km/h speed and the reality goes at 120 km/h, which is why we are always late” (technician, Barcelona).
“Against the idea that the neighborhood is conflictive because of its interculturality… the actual problem is with tourists and the competition for apartments, public space, consumption of goods and services” (Raval entity).
“The pressure of tourism, everywhere but especially here, has had a direct impact on rent prices” (Barceloneta entity).
“Sub-letting rooms with no contracts has become a common thing” (technician, Barcelona).
- Overall increase in prices
“Recent changes in the neighborhood surrounding are attracting more fashionable and modern establishments” (Besòs-Maresme entity).
“Many shops are aged; they close and these spaces are being exploited especially by newcomer immigrant population” (Trinitat Vella entity).
- Residential mobbing
“People suffer pressure and harassment so they leave, with completely abandoned dwellings because the landlords do not fix or maintain them, with no elevators and deteriorated stairs” (Barceloneta entities).
“Landlords as owners are obliged to maintain their property. Not doing so, passive mobbing, is a crime and can affect tenants even more than a more direct eviction” (Raval entity).
4.2. Local Strategies Addressing the Negative Effects of Gentrification
- Public housing: having a big public residential stock would entail that the administration becomes a player that can compete with the private sector. However, the Spanish case is very different from other (especially Northern) European countries on this subject. Apart from being only 1.5%, “Official Protected Housing” (VPO in Spanish) has been predominantly developed for sale and not for rent and most of these dwellings will lose their protection status within the next 30 years. In spite of recent efforts from the municipal administration, the public building stock is definitely an unresolved matter [70] both in Spain and at the municipal level (taking into account the limited resources of the local administration and the fact that the housing law is a national one).
- Rehabilitation funds: the combination of old building stock, sometimes with patrimonial value, within a city with high levels of segregation—without mentioning the bureaucratic issues that public help entail and that is one of the main reasons for not reaching vulnerated areas—result in a very problematic situation in which a great deal of community organization is needed in order to go through any renovation. The result is that most granted subsidies end up in middle- or high-income neighborhoods [71] (when they are indeed put forward).
- The Neighborhood Plan: this very progressive and comprehensive policy is focused on the more vulnerated areas of the city and intervenes in multiple dimensions, including the urban and physical one. The work gained throughout some of its interventions has given place to the “High Complexity Dwellings” subsidies, which focuses on the recognition of social differences in the city and thus concentrates on buildings where ordinary economic help is not reaching.
- Some other specific policies such as the Dintres Plan (whose goal is to combat landlord harassment by imposing fines to prevent mobbing situations); the Preferential and Withdrawal Right (which establishes an obligation to inform the public administration before any property sale, allowing the municipality to buy before any other private actor); the compulsory 30% of social housing in all new buildings and/or big rehabilitations; the recent stimulus given to housing cooperatives; etc. All these do not seem to tackle the problem fully, as the housing crisis is bigger than ever. There is thus a need to further investigate the impact of these measures and at the same time come up with new valuation tools, indices or reference prices before and after any urban intervention in order to identify and capture any surplus values that could result from public investment [72].
5. Incorporating the Dimensions of Social Capital and Social Infrastructure Into the Analysis
5.1. Social Capital
5.1.1. Social Capital as a Starting Point for Urban Renewal
“The isolation due to highways favored proximity relations which makes this the most organized neighborhood, in terms of associations” (Trinitat Vella entity).
“The few elder neighbors that still remain today have a sense of belonging that is very strong. The problem is they are less by the minute” (Barceloneta entity).
“The different situations and places for informal relation between neighbors are the ones that are absolutely vital, functional and can generate stronger solidarities” (Barceloneta entities).
“Self-management, which used to be the common thing, has been degrading and falling on less and less people, that are at the same time ageing. It is prone to disappear” (Besòs-Maresme entity).
5.1.2. Social Capital as Reception Strategies
“We need to make newcomers get involved more in neighborhood related issues and implicate in its entities, which will at the same time make them feel it, live it and want to improve it” (Trinitat Vella entitiy).
5.1.3. Social Capital as Retention Strategies
“A hypothesis to be confirmed is whether strong proximity relations favor a sense of belonging, making even young people want to stay [in the neighborhood]” (Trinitat Vella entitiy).
“There are networks of mutual support, related to the cultural element of the neighborhoods, that are informal yet entirely strong” (Raval entity).
“At some level, you could think of the associational tissue as an element of attraction” (Trinitat Vella entity).
5.1.4. Crisis as an Opportunity for Rapid Social Capital Generation
“This situation [COVID-19] has been a way for young people with a certain social consciousness, to quickly get involved for the first time because of their ‘availability” (Barceloneta entity).
“The pandemics has shown how very quickly people organize towards common goals” (Ciutat Meridiana entity).
5.1.5. The Role of Virtuality in Social Capital Making
“Social networks, internet, are ways to mobilize an entire neighborhood” (Barceloneta entity).
5.2. Social Infrastructure
5.2.1. Social Infrastructure as an Enhancer of Social Interaction or Segregator
“At an urbanistic level, some things have had a positive effect on the neighborhood because these make you want to be outside, wander and stay in the street” (Barceloneta entity).
“All public space interventions will, in the end, have positive effects in neighbor quality of life” (Trinitat Vella entity).
“The lack of spaces for interaction—other than the streets—do not stimulate the creation of a strong associational movement. There is no formal physical point of reference that can keep and stabilize ties” (Barceloneta entity).
“Some public spaces should not be thought as a beautiful Barcelona catalogue model, but towards the concretion of very specific resident’s needs and demands” (Barcelona technician).
“Some areas […] can turn into “no-land” areas” (Barcelona technician).
5.2.2. SI and the Question of Scales
“Rehabilitation policies, when their true goal is to recuperate a certain degraded area, are accompanied by the improvement of not only the building, but also of the street. It makes more sense to intervene by whole areas, not unconnected pins” (Besòs-Maresme entity).
5.2.3. Is SI a Gentrifying Agent?
“Urbanism related investment is the greatest gentrifier and this is our biggest threat [especially when combined with] degradation” (Besòs-Maresme entity).
“What is common? In vertical property, who’s responsible for what happens between my door and the street door?” (Trinitat Vella entity).
“This neighborhood is somehow like a town, in the sense that people are from here feel like they belong” (Trinitat Vella entity).
“We feel we are a separated part from the rest of the city” (Ciutat Meridiana entity).
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Characteristics of the population
- Characteristics of the buildings
- Urban regeneration and public spaces
- Neighborhood and Associationism
- Vision about the future
References
- Pírez, P. Actores Sociales y Gestión de la Ciudad. 1995. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/274313532_Actores_sociales_y_gestion_de_la_ciudad (accessed on 26 March 2024).
- Park, R.E. Human Ecology. Am. J. Sociol. 1936, 42, 1–15. Available online: http://www.jstor.org/stable/2768859 (accessed on 14 May 2024). [CrossRef]
- Sun, C.; Shibuya, Y.; Sekimoto, Y. Social segregation levels vary depending on activity space types: Comparison of segregation in residential, workplace, routine and non-routine activities in Tokyo metropolitan area. Cities 2024, 146, 104745. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- OECD. Metropolitan Areas; OECD Regional Statistics; OECD Publishing: Paris, France, 2018. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- OECD. Divided Cities: Understanding Intra-Urban Inequalities; OECD Publishing: Paris, France, 2018. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Frutos, T.; García, E. Diferenciación socio-espacial y segregación racial en España. Barataria 2016, 21, 91–109. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kauppinen, T.; van Ham, M. Unravelling the demographic dynamics of ethnic residential segregation. Popul. Space Place 2018, 25, e2193. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Mateos Rodríguez, P. Segregación residencial de minorías étnicas y el análisis geográfico del origen de nombres y apellidos. Cuad. Geogr. 2006, 39, 83–101. Available online: https://revistaseug.ugr.es/index.php/cuadgeo/article/view/1502 (accessed on 14 May 2024).
- Powell, R. Loïc Wacquant’s ‘ghetto’: The case of Gypsy-Travellers in the UK. Int. J. Urban Reg. Res. 2013, 37, 115–134. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Musterd, S.; Andersson, R. Housing Mix, Social Mix, and Social Opportunities. Urban Aff. Rev. 2005, 40, 761–790. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Galster, G. Neighborhood Social Mix: Theory, Evidence, and Implications for Policy and Planning. In Policy, Planning, and People: Promoting Justice in Urban Development; Carmon, N., Fainstein, S., Eds.; University of Pennsylvania Press: Philadelphia, PA, USA, 2013; pp. 307–336. [Google Scholar]
- Li, X.; Huang, X.; Li, D.; Xu, Y. Aggravated social segregation during the COVID-19 pandemic: Evidence from crowdsourced mobility data in twelve most populated U.S. metropolitan areas. Sustain. Cities Soc. 2022, 81, 103869. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Heiki, L.; Aldrich, D.; Faiad, C.; Aoki, T.; Tseng, P.; Aida, J. The Role of Social Capital in Depression During the COVID-19 Pandemic. Int. Perspect. Psychol. 2024, 13, 68–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Castel, R. Las Metamorfosis de la Cuestión Social. Una Crónica del Asalariado; Paidós: Buenos Aires, Argentina, 1997. [Google Scholar]
- Beck, U. Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity; SAGE: London, UK, 1986. [Google Scholar]
- Lauwe, P. Périphérie des villes et crise de civilisation. Cah. Int. Sociol. 1982, 72, 5–16. Available online: http://www.jstor.org/stable/40689992 (accessed on 14 May 2024).
- Hernández Aja, A.; Alguacil Gómez, J.; Camacho Gutiérrez, J. La vulnerabilidad urbana en España. Identificación y evolución de los barrios vulnerables. Empiria Rev. Metodol. Cienc. Soc. 2014, 27, 73–94. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Havard, S.; Deguen, S.; Bodin, J.; Louis, K.; Laurent, O.; Bard, D. A small-area index of socioeconomic deprivation to capture health inequalities in France. Soc. Sci. Med. 2018, 67, 2007–2016. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Egea Jiménez, C.; Nieto Calmaestra, J.A.; Domínguez Clemente, J.; González Rego, R. Vulnerabilidad del Tejido Social de los Barrios Desfavorecidos de Andalucía: Análisis y Potencialidades; Centro de Estudios Andaluces: Sevilla, Spain, 2018; Available online: https://www.centrodeestudiosandaluces.es/datos/factoriaideas/ifo11_08.pdf (accessed on 14 May 2024).
- Hernández-Aja, A.; Rodríguez Alonso, R.; Rodríguez Suárez, I. Barrios Vulnerables de las Grandes Ciudades Españolas. 1991/2001/2011; Spanish Ministry of Development: Madrid, Spain, 2018. [Google Scholar]
- Fernández Aragón, I.; Ochoa de Aspuru Gulin, O.; Ruiz Ciarreta, I. Análisis de la desigualdad urbana. Propuesta de un Índice Sintético de Vulnerabilidad Urbana Integral (ISVUI) en Bilbao. ACE Arch. City Environ. 2021, 15, 9520. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Garcia-Almirall, P.; Gemma, V.; Moix, B.M.; Ferrer Guasch, M.R.; Vima-Grau, S. Estudi i Detecció a la Ciutat de Barcelona D’àmbits de Vulnerabilitat Residencial; Ajuntament de Barcelona: Barcelona, Spain, 2017; Available online: http://hdl.handle.net/2117/114548 (accessed on 14 May 2024).
- Hanoon, S.K.; Abdullah, A.F.; Shafri, H.Z.M.; Wayayok, A. Comprehensive Vulnerability Assessment of Urban Areas Using an Integration of Fuzzy Logic Functions: Case Study of Nasiriyah City in South Iraq. Earth 2022, 3, 699–732. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Piasek, G.; Fernández Aragón, I.; Shershneva, J.; Garcia-Almirall, P. Assessment of Urban Neighbourhoods’ Vulnerability through an Integrated Vulnerability Index (IVI): Evidence from Barcelona, Spain. Soc. Sci. 2022, 11, 476. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fajardo, G.; Merino, F.; Caraffa, M. Innovación en el Acceso a la Vivienda: Masovería, Cesión de Uso y Cohousing; CIRIEC: Valencia, Spain, 2022. [Google Scholar]
- Temes, R. Valoración de la vulnerabilidad integral en las áreas residenciales de Madrid. EURE (Santiago) 2014, 40, 119–149. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ochoa-Ramírez, J.A.; Guzmán-Ramírez, A. La vulnerabilidad urbana y su caracterización socio-espacial. Legado DE Arquitectura y Diseño 2020, 15, 27. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Martín-Consuegra, F.; Alonso, C.; Frutos, B. La regeneración urbana integrada y la declaración de Toledo. Info. Cons. 2015, 67, 2. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Tejedor, J. Nuevo paradigma normativo sobre la ciudad: Retornando a la ciudad tradicional. Info. Cons. 2015, 67, 22. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Montaner, J.M. Cap a una nova cultura de la rehabilitació a Barcelona. Qüestions d’Habitatge 2019, 23, 8–19. Available online: http://hdl.handle.net/2117/335652 (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- Hernández-Aja, A.; Rodríguez-Suárez, I. De la rehabilitación a la regeneración urbana integrada. Ciudades 2017, 20, 1–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Piasek, G.; Vima-Grau, S.; Garcia-Almirall, P. Brechas Y oportunidades en el diseño y la gestión de políticas de regeneración urbana. Estudio de 5 barrios vulnerables de Barcelona. Inguruak 2021, 70. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- 8/2013 National Spanish Law. Available online: https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-2013-6938 (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- RE-INHABIT Project. Available online: https://vimac.upc.edu/es/re-inhabit/presentacion (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- ENER-REGEN Project. Available online: https://futur.upc.edu/36993491 (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- Lees, L.; Slater, T.; Wyly, E. The Gentrification Reader; Routledge: New York, NY, USA, 2010. [Google Scholar]
- Smith, N. The New Urban Frontier. Gentrification and the Revanchist City; Routledge: New York, NY, USA; London, UK, 1996. [Google Scholar]
- Hübscher, M. Gentrificación y Vulnerabilidad. Evaluación de Aspectos Sociales y Urbanísticos en Santa Cruz de Tenerife (Islas Canarias). In Ciudades Medias y Áreas Metropolitanas. De la Dispersión a la Regeneración; Abellán, F.C., Ed.; Ediciones de la Universidad de Castilla-la Mancha: Cuenca, Spain, 2018; pp. 633–651. [Google Scholar]
- Lin, L.; Di, L.; Zhang, C.; Guo, L.; Di, Y. Remote Sensing of Urban Poverty and Gentrification. Sustainability 2021, 13, 4022. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Janoshcka, M.; Hidalgo, R. La Ciudad Neoliberal. Gentrificación y Exclusión en Santiago de Chile, Buenos Aires, Ciudad de México y Madrid. Santiago de Chile; Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile: Santiago, Chile, 2014. [Google Scholar]
- Sorando, D.; Ardura, A. First We Take Manhattan; Catarata: Madrid, Spain, 2016. [Google Scholar]
- Piñeira, M.J.; Fernández, A.; Mínguez, M.C. Vulnerability and Touristification, Who Are the Losers of the Urban Center? In Sostenibilidad Turística: Overtourism vs. Undertourism; Pons, G.X., Blanco-Romero, A., Troitiño-Torralba, L., Blázquez-Salom, M., Balears, I., Eds.; Societat d’Història Natural de les Balears: Palma, Spain, 2020. [Google Scholar]
- Brown-Saracino, J. Explicating divided approaches to gentrification and growing income inequality. Ann. Rev. Soc. 2017, 43, 515–539. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lütke, P.; Jäger, E.M. Food Consumption in Cologne Ehrenfeld: Gentrification through Gastrofication? Urban Sci. 2021, 5, 26. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Klinenberg, E. Palaces for the People: How Social Infrastructure Can Help Fight Inequality, Polarization, and the Decline of Civic Life; Crown Publishing Group: New York, NY, USA, 2018. [Google Scholar]
- Latham, A.; Layton, J. Social infrastructure: Why it matters and how urban geographers might study it. Urban Geogr. 2022, 43, 659–668. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Stender, M.; Nordberg, L. Learning from COVID-19: Social infrastructure in disadvantaged housing areas in Denmark. Urban Plan. 2022, 7, 432–444. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Larissa, L.; Harlan, S.; Bolin, B.; Hacket, E.; Hope, D.; Kirby, A.; Nelson, A.; Rex, T.; Wolf, S. Bonding and Bridging: Understanding the Relationship between Social Capital and Civic Action. J. Plan. Educ. Res. 2004, 24, 64–77. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- How’s Life? OECD’s Statistical Report. 2015. Available online: https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/economics/how-s-life-2015_how_life-2015-en (accessed on 4 July 2024).
- Schwartz, G.; Leifheit, K.; Arcaya, M.; Keene, D. Eviction as a community health exposure. Soc. Sci. Med. 2024, 340, 116496. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Open Data Barcelona. Available online: https://opendata-ajuntament.barcelona.cat/en/ (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- Barcelona Statistics Department. Available online: https://ajuntament.barcelona.cat/estadistica/castella/index.htm (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- Catalonia Statistics Department. Available online: https://www.idescat.cat/?lang=en (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- Barcelona Online Data Portal. Available online: https://portaldades.ajuntament.barcelona.cat/es/ (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- Atlas.ti software. Available online: https://atlasti.com/ (accessed on 15 May 2024).
- Van Dijk, T.A. News as Discourse; Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.: Mahwah, NJ, USA, 1988. [Google Scholar]
- Guba, E.G. Criteria for assessing trustworthiness of naturalistic enquiries. Educ. Commun. Technol. J. 1981, 29, 75–91. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Treharne, G.; Riggs, D. Ensuring Quality in Qualitative Research. In Qualitative Research in Clinical and Health Psychology; Rohleder, P., Lyons, A., Eds.; Bloomsbury Publishing: London, UK, 2014. [Google Scholar]
- López-Gay, A.; Sales-Favà, J.; Solana-Solana, M.; Fernánez, A.; Peralta, A. El avance de la gentrificación en Barcelona y Madrid, 2011–2019: Análisis socioespacial a partir de un índice de gentrificación. Estud. Geogr. 2021, 82, e084. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- López-Gay, A.; Ortiz-Guitart, A.; Solana-Solana, M. Vivienda, cambio poblacional y desplazamiento en un barrio en proceso de gentrificación. El caso de Sant Antoni (Barcelona). EURE (Santiago) 2022, 48. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cocola-Gant, A.; López-Gay, A. Transnational gentrification, tourism and the formation of ‘foreign only’ enclaves in Barcelona. Urban Stud. 2020, 57, 3025–3043. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Bridge, G. It’s not Just a Question of Taste: Gentrification, the Neighbourhood, and Cultural Capital. Environ. Plan. A Econ. Space 2006, 38, 1965–1978. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hernández, A. De la Botiga a la Boutique. URBS Rev. Estud. Urbanos Cienc. Soc. 2016, 6, 79–99. Available online: https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/articulo?codigo=5641798 (accessed on 26 March 2024).
- Pareja-Eastway, M.; Sánchez-Martínez, M.T. El sistema de vivienda en España y el papel de las políticas ¿qué falta por resolver? Cuadernos Económicos de ICE 2015, 90, 149–174. Available online: https://www.revistasice.com/index.php/CICE/article/view/6111/6111 (accessed on 19 March 2024).
- Byrne, M. Generation rent and the financialization of housing: A comparative exploration of the growth of the private rental sector in Ireland, the UK and Spain. Hous. Stud. 2020, 35, 743–765. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Domingo, G.; Escorihuela, I. Qui Desnona a Barcelona? Anàlisi del Paper dels Grans Propietaris Privats en les Expulsions de la Ciutat. Observatori DESC. 2022. Available online: https://observatoridesc.org/sites/default/files/publication/files/informe_quidesnona_web.pdf (accessed on 26 March 2024).
- Collaborative Eviction Map. Available online: https://cmmm-maps.eu/barcelona/ (accessed on 23 May 2024).
- Arellano, B.; Roca, J. Informe Relatiu a la Valoració del Impacte de la Nova Proposta Normativa de Mesures Urgents per Millorar l’Accés a l’Habitatge Regulada al DLL 17/2019. 2020. Ajuntament de Barcelona. Available online: https://l1nq.com/4NtR8 (accessed on 19 March 2024).
- Illa, M. La Falsa Solució Turística: Concentració de Beneficis i Deute Social; Observatori del Deute en la Globalització (ODG): Barcelona, Spain, 2019; Available online: https://l1nq.com/vvlg2 (accessed on 19 March 2024).
- Navarro Soler, L.; Díez, O. La crisi de l’habitatge. Barcelona Metròpolis Dossier, 24 July 2021. Available online: https://www.barcelona.cat/metropolis/ca/continguts/la-crisi-de-lhabitatge (accessed on 16 May 2024).
- Uzqueda, A.; Garcia-Almirall, P.; Cornadó, C.; Vima-Grau, S. Critical Review of Public Policies for the Rehabilitation of Housing Stock: The Case of Barcelona. Buildings 2021, 11, 108. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Uzqueda Martínez, Á.L. La Intervención Pública en Rehabilitación y Regeneración Urbana en Barcelona: Caracterización de Claves Operativas y Metodológicas. Ph.D. Thesis, Technology of Architecture-Polytechnic University of Catalonia, Barcelona, Spain, 2024. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Németh, J. Briding and Bonding. Public Space and Immigrant Integration in Barcelona’s el Raval. In Compation to Public Space, 1st ed.; Mehta, V., Palazzo, D., Eds.; Routledge: London, UK, 2020. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Alabart Vilà, A. Polítiques Urbanístiques i Moviment Associatiu Veïnal. Barc. Soc. Rev. d’Inform. Estud. Soc. 2010, 19, 87–97. Available online: https://ajuntament.barcelona.cat/dretssocials/sites/default/files/revista/revista-19-art7-politiques-urbanistiques-moviment-associatui-veinal.pdf (accessed on 23 May 2024).
- Storr, V.; Haeffele, S.; Grube, L. Crisis as a Source of Social Capital: Adaptation and Formation of Social Capital during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Cosm. Taxis 2021, 9, 94. Available online: https://cosmosandtaxis.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/storr_et_al_ct_vol9_iss_5_6.pdf (accessed on 5 April 2024).
- Pénard, T.; Poussing, N. Internet Use and Social Capital: The Strength of Virtual Ties. J. Econ. Issues 2014, 44, 569–595. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Alessandrini, M. Getting Connected: Can Social Capital be Virtual? Webology 2006, 3, 1–8. Available online: https://www.webology.org/data-cms/articles/20200515034902pma33.pdf (accessed on 5 April 2024).
- Manyena, S.B. The concept of resilience revisited. Disasters 2006, 30, 434–450. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Domínguez-Mujica, J.; González-Pérez, J.M.; Parreño-Castellano, J.M.; Sánchez-Aguilera, D. Gentrification on the Move. New Dynamics in Spanish Mature Urban-Tourist Neighborhoods. Urban Sci. 2021, 5, 33. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Renzaho, A.; Richardson, B.; Strugnell, C. Resident well-being, community connections and neighborhood perceptions, pride and opportunities among disadvantage metropolitan and regional communities: Evidence from the neighborhood renewal project. J. Community Psychol. 2012, 40, 871–885. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Domínguez-Mujica, J. The Urban Mirror of the Socioeconomic Transformations in Spain. Urban Sci. 2021, 5, 13. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Neighborhood * | Neighbor Association | Housing Related Entity |
---|---|---|
La Barceloneta | 2 | 1 |
El Raval | 2 | 2 |
Trinitat Vella | 1 | 1 |
Ciutat Meridiana | 1 | 1 |
Besòs i Maresme | 1 | 1 |
Case Study | 2016 | 2019 | Change |
---|---|---|---|
Barcelona | 60.265 | 80.553 | 134% |
Raval | 2.355 | 2.967 | 126% |
Barceloneta | 545 | 746 | 137% |
Ciutat Meridiana | 146 | 203 | 139% |
Trinitat Vella | 166 | 388 | 234% |
Besòs-Maresme | 462 | 609 | 132% |
Neighborhood | 2015 | 2016 | 2017 | 2018 | 2019 | 2020 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Barcelona | 44.0% | 46.1% | 50.2% | 52.4% | 52.8% | 56.0% |
Raval | 65.8% | 69.2% | 73.9% | 80.0% | 80.2% | 89.5% |
Barceloneta | 48.7% | 53.0% | 58.0% | 68.6% | 62.7% | 69.7% |
Ciutat Meridiana | 46.0% | 48.0% | 51.2% | 57.8% | 63.3% | 65.9% |
Trinitat Vella | 46.5% | 49.8% | 51.0% | 59.5% | 60.0% | 68.6% |
Besòs i Maresme | 48.6% | 51.6% | 58.1% | 64.2% | 67.3% | 73.7% |
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Piasek, G.; Garcia-Almirall, P. Vulnerated Urban Areas under Regeneration: Strategies to Prevent Neighborhood Expulsion in Barcelona or How to Improve without Expelling? Urban Sci. 2024, 8, 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci8030118
Piasek G, Garcia-Almirall P. Vulnerated Urban Areas under Regeneration: Strategies to Prevent Neighborhood Expulsion in Barcelona or How to Improve without Expelling? Urban Science. 2024; 8(3):118. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci8030118
Chicago/Turabian StylePiasek, Gonzalo, and Pilar Garcia-Almirall. 2024. "Vulnerated Urban Areas under Regeneration: Strategies to Prevent Neighborhood Expulsion in Barcelona or How to Improve without Expelling?" Urban Science 8, no. 3: 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci8030118
APA StylePiasek, G., & Garcia-Almirall, P. (2024). Vulnerated Urban Areas under Regeneration: Strategies to Prevent Neighborhood Expulsion in Barcelona or How to Improve without Expelling? Urban Science, 8(3), 118. https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci8030118