Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/27728
Author(s): Cravinho, A.
Silva, T. M. da.
Editor: Pinto, P. T., Brandão, A., and Lopes, S. S.
Date: 2021
Title: Touristification of spaces and urban lifestyles: São Paulo square, Lisbon
Book title/volume: Conference Proceedings Grand Projects - Urban Legacies of the Late 20th Century
Pages: 741 - 752
Event title: Grand Projects - Urban Legacies of the Late 20th Century
Reference: Cravinho, A., & Silva, T. M. da. (2021). Touristification of spaces and urban lifestyles: São Paulo square, Lisbon. In P. T. Pinto, A. Brandão, & S. S. Lopes (Eds.), Conference Proceedings Grand Projects - Urban Legacies of the Late 20th Century (pp. 741-752). DINÂMIA’CET. http://hdl.handle.net/10071/23862/edulearn.2022.1814
ISBN: 978-989-781-551-5
Keywords: City
São Paulo square
Touristification
Gentrification
Abstract: Over the past decade Lisbon’s historic city center was marked by extensive transformations, notably the loss of residents and traditional commerce followed by gentrification trends. While the former led to a drain of the city's assets and a consequent degradation of its buildings, the latter attracted new stakeholders increasing building’s rehabilitation and prompting the growth of commercial and residential typologies for tourism purposes. Currently, with the COVID-19 pandemic, new challenges arise that change the previously mentioned dynamics. In a global context these dynamics were associated with factors such as the instability of the financial sector, migratory flows and the emergence and development of new technologies which together with the instability of social relations make the relocation of social interaction to multiple places a reality. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, these factors have contributed to the increase of the real estate and tourist pressure, as a result of the occupation of buildings for temporary residence or local accommodation, the mobility of large tourist flows and the growth of nightlife activities, untying the city, its identity and unique memory. But during the confinement period, deriving from it and from the lack of tourist flow, Lisbon has seen an emptying of its public space. This essay identifies how the “new” stakeholders, especially tourists, contribute to lifestyle and spatial transformations, looking into the particular case of São Paulo square and its surroundings - where the new urban uses, associated with tourism and leisure, demand a livingness and identity of a city in conflict with its territorial and social dynamics. Furthermore, this study contributes to the elaboration of flexible urban strategies that address both top-down and bottom-up demographic change, disclosing how the new dynamics can redefine the city and mitigate its fewer positive effects.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:DINÂMIA'CET-CRI - Comunicações a conferências internacionais

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