Utilize este identificador para referenciar este registo: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/25244
Autoria: Inglez de Souza, Diego
Data: Abr-2022
Título próprio: The history of the Cité Balzac and the vicious circle of social housing
Número: Sp22
Referência bibliográfica: Inglez de Souza, D. (2022). The history of the Cité Balzac and the vicious circle of social housing. Cidade, Comunidades e Territórios, Sp22, 89-101. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/25244
ISSN: 2182-3030
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.15847/cct.25029
Palavras-chave: Social housing in France
Paris’ red suburbs
Urban renewal in the 2000s
Resumo: The history of the Cité Balzac, a housing complex built in the 1960’s in Vitry-sur-Seine, an emblematic “red suburb” in the south of Paris, reveals several transformations on public housing policies in France and some permanencies throughout five decades. Originally built to provide affordable housing for the inhabitants of problematic neighbourhoods within Paris, this large-scale complex inspired by post war architectural models and organized following functionalist urban-ism schemes has been initially occupied by an emerging middle class that left the apartments when private property became encouraged by a liberal government during the 1970’s. The social housing apartments were by then occupied by impoverished immigrants and French citizens coming from former colonies and became stigmatized as a symbol of social problems and ethnic conflicts. Recently, even being situated in a municipality dominated by the French Communist Party since 1920’s, the Cité Balzac was the epicentre of an intense urban renovation project led by the National Agency for Urban Renewal (ANRU), giving room to a controlled gentrification process that tried to erase the image of sensible neighbourhood that characterized this territory and its surroundings with the demolition of the bigger blocks and the ‘residentialization’ of the smaller ones. This project opened space for new housing blocks built by real estate and public works contractors based on private property to be occupied by middle class families that couldn’t afford to buy in Paris intramuros. This controlled gentrification happened gradually as the Grand Paris project was taking place, expanding the limits of the French capital to its closer suburbs with the extension and improvement of the public transportation system, feeding a vicious circle that raises fundamental issues about the role of social housing and its contradictions.
Arbitragem científica: yes
Acesso: Acesso Aberto
Aparece nas coleções:DINÂMIA'CET-RI - Artigos em revistas internacionais com arbitragem científica

Ficheiros deste registo:
Ficheiro Descrição TamanhoFormato 
article_hdl25244.pdf537,11 kBAdobe PDFVer/Abrir


FacebookTwitterDeliciousLinkedInDiggGoogle BookmarksMySpaceOrkut
Formato BibTex mendeley Endnote Logotipo do DeGóis Logotipo do Orcid 

Todos os registos no repositório estão protegidos por leis de copyright, com todos os direitos reservados.