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The transformation of Barcelona from a city primarily known as the 'Paris of the South' to the 'Capital of the Mediterranean' illustrates the complexities of placemaking. Integrating identity politics, urban regeneration efforts, and cultural icons played a key role in reshaping the city's image. However, failures like the Universal Forum of Cultures highlight the challenges of connecting design and lived experiences, often leading to issues with commercialization, gentrification, and the need for community involvement in sustainable urban development.
Becoming Centre: Tourism placemaking and space production in two neighborhoods in Barcelona, 2019
Over the last decades Barcelona has experienced social and economic transformations brought by the conversion of peripheral urban neighborhoods into tourist attractions. In this sense urban tourism has been the latest chapter of spatial reorganization to sustain capitalism within the global neoliberal environment in the Catalan city. In addition, the urban commodification process has expanded into not only central and historical districts, but also more peripheral zones outside the tourist bubble. Those transformations signify a symbolic turn: they became part of the centre. Since the 1992 Olympic Games, Barcelona’s brand, both for the city and for tourism, has experienced an important promotion where the urban periphery has become both part of the centre, as well as part of its global city imagery through placemaking, public policy, and political decisions. In short, the steady inclusion of neighborhoods such as Vila de Gracia and Poblenou into the tourist experience enhances the Barcelonan tourist imagery. The inclusion of new cultural icons and tourist attractions embody a slight spatial and symbolic turn to boost the city’s visitor activities. In order to facilitate an in-depth comprehension, the ethnographical approach has been taken.
Tourism Geographies, 2019
Over the last decades Barcelona has experienced social and economic transformations brought by the conversion of peripheral urban neighborhoods into tourist attractions. In this sense urban tourism has been the latest chapter of spatial reorganization to sustain capitalism within the global neoliberal environment in the Catalan city. In addition, the urban commodification process has expanded into not only central and historical districts, but also more peripheral zones outside the tourist bubble. Those transformations signify a symbolic turn: they became part of the centre. Since the 1992 Olympic Games, Barcelona’s brand, both for the city and for tourism, has experienced an important promotion where the urban periphery has become both part of the centre, as well as part of its global city imagery through placemaking, public policy, and political decisions. In short, the steady inclusion of neighborhoods such as Vila de Gracia and Poblenou into the tourist experience enhances the Barcelonan tourist imagery. The inclusion of new cultural icons and tourist attractions embody a slight spatial and symbolic turn to boost the city’s visitor activities. In order to facilitate an in-depth comprehension, the ethnographical approach has been taken.
Tourism Geographies, 2005
Cuadernos de Turismo
This paper reinterprets these transformations, departing from notions of ‘relational space’, re-conceptualizing urban spaces as mobile and relational, continuously reconstructed and reground ed by flows of people, knowledge, and capital. We examine the representations of mobility and the embodied mobile practices in relation to the ongoing mutation of a Barcelona's neigh borhood, in which the urban transformations linked to the 1992 Olympic Games, the renewal of the waterfront and the later development of a hi-tech cluster has triggered a profound and long-lasting process of social change. El presente articulo reconceptualiza los espacios urbanos como móviles y relacionales, continuamente reconstruidos y redefinidos por flujos de personas, de conocimiento y de capital, examinando el desarrollo de las prácticas móviles que giran en torno al barrio del Poblenou de Barcelona, en el que las transformaciones urbanas vinculadas a los Juegos Olímpicos de 1992, la renovación del frente ...
Tourism, Place-making, and Urban Transformations in Barcelona and Beirut,” in Eckart Woertz (ed.) “Wise Cities” in the Mediterranean? Challenges of Social and Environmental Sustainability, (Barcelona: Barcelona Centre for International Affairs, 2018), pp. 161-171.
The activity of visitors and tourists is vital to the economic systems of most large urban areas. As cities face global competition for visitors they become more interested in refashioning their built environment and marketing their image to encourage and sustain these flows. At the same time, tourism-oriented urban transformations help integrate cities into the global market economy of tourist, capital and image flows. In the process, the interests, agency and built spaces of urban communities risk being marginalised in the face of the demands of global markets. At the extreme, as we have seen in Barcelona, Venice and other popular and “successful” tourist cities, local communities mobilise to limit these tourist flows, challenge the tourism-oriented development model, and seek to reclaim their “right to the city.” Sustainable urban development therefore requires strategies to promote tourism development while managing it through inclusive, democratic, community-involved processes. This chapter explores these dynamics through a study of the contrasting experiences of tourism development in the Mediterranean cities of Barcelona and Beirut.
Cuadernos de Turismo, 2022
This paper reinterprets these transformations, departing from notions of 'relational space', re-conceptualizing urban spaces as mobile and relational, continuously reconstructed and reground ed by flows of people, knowledge, and capital. We examine the representations of mobility and the embodied mobile practices in relation to the ongoing mutation of a Barcelona's neighbourhood, in which the urban transformations linked to the 1992 Olympic Games, the renewal of the waterfront and the later development of a hi-tech cluster has triggered a profound and long-lasting process of social change.
The Global Cultural Capital
Is there anything new remaining to be said about Barcelona? The city's international prestige is nowadays indisputable. It has become a commonplace in the European Cities Monitorwhich lists the top European cities for business expansion according to the opinion of senior executives from leading businessesto find Barcelona at the top of that list (Cushman and Wakefield 2010) in the quality of life category. 1 Equally, its stature as a tourist destination does not even require an argument. Desiring Barcelona comes for the potential visitor as naturally as breathing, its status endlessly validated by armies of preceding tourists left in awe by its charms. In more specialized circles, the ones this book now joins, saturation takes different forms. Barcelona's transformation in the post-Francoist period is widely considered among architects, urban planners, and local politicians around the world, as a model because of its perceived ability to reconcile economic restructuring with spatial regeneration and the widening of the citizens' right to the city (McNeill 1999; Kirby 2004; Marshall 2004a; Busquets 2005: 345-445). 2 As such, the Barcelona case has been widely studied in academic contexts and emulated across the world by policymakers and other local institutional agents (González 2011). But no less abundant have been the critical accounts of this transformation as the end of progressive urban life and the silencing of democratic voices at the service of global capital. In joining such a crowded scene, this book pays, once again, homage to the exceptional Barcelona case and claims to illuminate previously untold
Architectural Design, 2005
2016
The phenomenon of rebranding Barcelona's image called the Barcelona effect or 'Barcelona Model', is exampled as one of the most spectacular transformations of the city's perception in the last decade. Why has Barcelona been successful? Is it the effect of the recently intensified revitalization practice, or has the city of Barcelona built its brand market value for years? The aim of the research is to name these transition practices characteristic of the Barcelona case that may be applicable to other European metropolises under ongoing transformation processes. The research spans the period from the World Fair of 1888-the first economically important international event organized in Barcelona, to the present time and development of the 22@Barcelona Districte de la innovació idea. The results of the research suggest that the "Barcelona Model" is not a homogenous concept that is made up of diverse elements: urban design, governance, and planning. The new image of the city was created due to implemented urban acupuncture, the conversion of the city into a huge service industry, the redistribution of a high level of services and urbanism to the periphery of Barcelona, and the controversial treatment of architectural heritage. It is impossible to build a strong, long-lasting brand without relating the image to the historical and urban context. The recipe for a successful rebranding is to balance excessive aspirations, real space, and the local community's needs.