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In La Barceloneta, one of the beachfront quarters of the city of Barcelona, the rapid expansion of mainly illegal short-term rental apartments for tourists and noise problems related to alcohol-fuelled nightlife consumption, are challenging community liveability and peaceful urban coexistence between different social groups. Similar to other cases worldwide, the rapid expansion of touristification on the urban and socio-economic fabric of the city has become an increasing source of dispute and residents' contestation. By taking a diachronical critical review, the first part of this paper examines the role of urban planning developed in La Barceloneta during the period 1950–2016 and how it transformed the area into a leisure-oriented and tourist-oriented quarter. The second part of the paper is based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork that was conducted to capture the range of different voices, stories and discourses produced and reproduced by different actors affected and/or involved in the recent touristification of La Barceloneta. Findings obtained confirm that current urban policy and planning are clearly insufficient to tackle and address negative community-based impacts aforementioned. Hence, the final section highlights the urgent need for the development and implementation of new, community-based urban planning with the aim of ensuring community liveability and peaceful urban coexistence between different social groups in La Barceloneta.

摘要

在巴塞罗那的滨海街区巴塞洛内塔, 对旅游者非法短期出租公寓的快速扩张以及由酒精激发的夜生活消费产生的噪音问题正挑战该社区的宜居和不同社会群体和平共处。与世界范围其他案例类似, 城市社会经济组织的快速旅游化已逐渐成为争端及居民争议的来源。通过采用一个历时性的批判评述, 本文第一部分考察了1950-2016期间城市规划在巴塞洛内塔的作用以及它是如何把该地区转变为旅游休闲导向的街区。本文的第二部分基于两年的田野民族志, 捕捉了在巴塞洛内塔近期旅游化过程中有关行动者产生及再现的不同声音、经历及论述。结果证实, 当前的城市规划与政策很明显不足以解决上述负面的社区影响。因此, 文章的最后部分强调, 为了确保巴塞洛内塔社区的宜居和不同社会群体的和平共处, 迫切需要发展与实施新的、社区导向的城市规划。

Additional information

Author information

Jordi Nofre

Jordi Nofre holds a PhD in human geography, University of Barcelona. Since January 2010, he is enrolled as an FCT postdoctoral research fellow at Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences at the New University of Lisbon. His main research areas include social geographies of youth in Euromediterranean countries, youth subcultures, and nightlife and urban transformations in South and South East European cities, and has published 40 scientific papers to date. Nofre is a principal investigator of LXNIGHTS project. Nofre also teaches geographies of the urban night in the undergraduate courses of sociology at the Faculty of Social & Human Sciences at the New University of Lisbon (Portugal), and is also an associate lecturer in the doctoral courses on urban studies at the same institution.

Emanuele Giordano

Emanuele Giordando is BA in economics and is currently finishing his PhD thesis on geography and urban planning at the Université Paul Valéry – Montpellier 3. He joined the University of Montpellier in 2013 having previously worked as a researcher at the University of Venice. His research is centred about the recent evolution of lighting practices and the performative effects of illumination on nocturnal practices and performances.

Adam Eldridge

Adam Eldridge is a senior lecturer based within the School of Social and Historical Studies at the University of Westminster. He completed his PhD with the Department of Gender and Cultural Studies at the University of Sydney, Australia. His thesis, ‘Of Other Places: Theming Geography, Identity and History’, examined the articulation of place, cultural identity, and history within themed environments. He has worked on several qualitative research projects, principally concerning the urban renaissance, and the evening economy. His research examines town and city centres at night with a focus on gender/sexuality and public space, the 24 hour city, pleasure, and late-night drinking cultures.

João C. Martins

João Carlos Martins holds a PhD in urban and tourism sociology at the New University of Lisbon (2014). He graduated in sociology at the New University of Lisbon (2004) with a thesis regarding housing social movements and the Portuguese Transition. He has an MA in urban anthropology at the ISCTE-IUL (2009) where he developed his work on the Bairro da Liberdade, with his thesis ‘Bairro da Liberdade: Uma abordagem sobre Habitação Degradada e Realojamento’. From 2009 to 2011, he was enrolled in CICS.NOVA with the project ‘A construção da metrópole: Segregação urban e Intervenção Pública em Lisboa (1950–2011)’. From 2010 to 2014, he has carried out his doctoral research on tourism urbanization, ‘Algarve: da Urbanização turística à Metropolização Sazonal (1960–2013)’, about the touristification of seaside areas, urban leisure promotion, and labour seasonality. His recently submitted postdoctoral project is about social and spatial impacts processes of touristification in contemporary Algarve, Southern Portugal.

Jorge Sequera

Jorge Sequera graduated in political sciences and holds a PhD in sociology (2012) from the Complutense University of Madrid. He is currently enrolled as an FCT postdoctoral research fellow at Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences at the New University of Lisbon. He has been enrolled at the Department of Political Sciences and International Relations of the Autonomous University of Madrid between 2014 and 2016 and visiting postdoctoral researcher at many world-recognized scholar centres, the Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences at the New University of Lisbon (CICS.NOVA), University of Buenos Aires (Argentina), University of Leeds (UK), Columbia University (USA), and University Federal de Rio de Janeiro (Brazil). He has bee an assistant lecturer at the Department of Social Analysis of the Carlos III University, in Madrid. Jorge Sequera was awarded with the 1st World Social Science Fellow in Sustainable Urbanization (International Social Science Council, UNESCO) and is a co-founder of the association on cultural and urban intervention ‘Oficina de Urbanismo Social’ in Madrid.

Funding

This work was financially supported by Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia [grant number SFRH/BPD/108458/2015].
 

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