Right to the city, accumulation and deterritorialization. Public space and fishermen in Rosario
Rosario's relationship with the Paraná was mediated by the port. This link began to revent in the 1990s. A chain of public spaces, wadis and avenues replaced the out-of-use ferroportuary facilities. This procedure improved the connectivity of the city with the riverbank, from a smaller scale de...
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Auteurs principaux: | , |
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Format: | Online |
Langue: | spa |
Publié: |
Universidad Nacional de Colombia - Sede Bogotá - Facultad de Artes - Instituto de Investigaciones Hábitat, Ciudad & Territorio
2020
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Accès en ligne: | https://revistas.unal.edu.co/index.php/bitacora/article/view/82555 |
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Résumé: | Rosario's relationship with the Paraná was mediated by the port. This link began to revent in the 1990s. A chain of public spaces, wadis and avenues replaced the out-of-use ferroportuary facilities. This procedure improved the connectivity of the city with the riverbank, from a smaller scale designed for automotive transport and pedestrian traffic. The ferroportuary interface that had governed the city-rail relationship was replaced by a continuum of public spaces. A large part of the studies carried out on this great urban transformation have concentrated on the inspirations, planning, impacts of these Great Urban Projects on land use, the real estate market, the gentrification of the area and the metamorphosis of the city. However, other changes linked to the environment, habitat and occupation of the ancient inhabitants of the ravine have not been analyzed. While the public spaces grew and were partially concessioned, the small scale fishermen observed how their habitat and sources of work were reduced. In this article, we try to understand how these subject-others experience the process of accumulation by dispossession and deterritorialization of which they are the object with the reinvention of Rosario's waterfront. |
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