Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to Gentrification

<p>Political tides are evident in most community development practices. Sometimes it hinders good planning while at other times it aides development, and sometimes the unintended consequences of politics preserve neighborhoods for a long time, allowing for a totally different development outco...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mart HIOB, Nele NUTT, Sulev NURME, Fransesco DE LUCA
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Babes Bolyai University 2012-06-01
Series:Transylvanian Review of Administrative Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rtsa.ro/tras/index.php/tras/article/view/63
id doaj-855a86cd4975431c9e6c579260b66ce2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-855a86cd4975431c9e6c579260b66ce22021-06-30T05:52:01ZengBabes Bolyai UniversityTransylvanian Review of Administrative Sciences1842-28452012-06-018369210579Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to GentrificationMart HIOB0Nele NUTT1Sulev NURME2Fransesco DE LUCA3Lecturer, Department of Landscape Architecture, Tallinn University of Technology, Tartu College, EstoniaLecturer, Department of Landscape Architecture, Tallinn University of Technology, Tartu College, EstoniaLecturer, Department of Landscape Architecture, Tallinn University of Technology, Tartu College, EstoniaLecturer, Department of Landscape Architecture, Tallinn University of Technology, Tartu College, Estonia<p>Political tides are evident in most community development practices. Sometimes it hinders good planning while at other times it aides development, and sometimes the unintended consequences of politics preserve neighborhoods for a long time, allowing for a totally different development outcome. This article is a detailed case study of one such neighborhood. This neighborhood, known as Supilinn, in Tartu Estonia was a rundown area slated for total demolition during Soviet occupation. Due to the lack of finances and low priorities, the former communist regime abandoned the idea of demolition and left the neighborhood to deteriorate further. Two decades later, Supilinn is a bustling community where young and old, rich and poor, existing and new, all co-exist. A community left to die has resurrected itself through bottom up planning and citizen initiatives to become one of the preferred places to live, so much so that the neighborhood now faces the threat of gentrification with social displacement and complete renewal. The authors, all active members in this neighborhood, have lived and worked there for a while. They tell the story of many such transformations across the landscape through the lens of one case study.</p>https://rtsa.ro/tras/index.php/tras/article/view/63estoniagentrificationurban revitalizationpost-socialisthistorical wooden architecturecultural valuesocial diversity.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mart HIOB
Nele NUTT
Sulev NURME
Fransesco DE LUCA
spellingShingle Mart HIOB
Nele NUTT
Sulev NURME
Fransesco DE LUCA
Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to Gentrification
Transylvanian Review of Administrative Sciences
estonia
gentrification
urban revitalization
post-socialist
historical wooden architecture
cultural value
social diversity.
author_facet Mart HIOB
Nele NUTT
Sulev NURME
Fransesco DE LUCA
author_sort Mart HIOB
title Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to Gentrification
title_short Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to Gentrification
title_full Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to Gentrification
title_fullStr Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to Gentrification
title_full_unstemmed Risen from the Dead: From Slumming to Gentrification
title_sort risen from the dead: from slumming to gentrification
publisher Babes Bolyai University
series Transylvanian Review of Administrative Sciences
issn 1842-2845
publishDate 2012-06-01
description <p>Political tides are evident in most community development practices. Sometimes it hinders good planning while at other times it aides development, and sometimes the unintended consequences of politics preserve neighborhoods for a long time, allowing for a totally different development outcome. This article is a detailed case study of one such neighborhood. This neighborhood, known as Supilinn, in Tartu Estonia was a rundown area slated for total demolition during Soviet occupation. Due to the lack of finances and low priorities, the former communist regime abandoned the idea of demolition and left the neighborhood to deteriorate further. Two decades later, Supilinn is a bustling community where young and old, rich and poor, existing and new, all co-exist. A community left to die has resurrected itself through bottom up planning and citizen initiatives to become one of the preferred places to live, so much so that the neighborhood now faces the threat of gentrification with social displacement and complete renewal. The authors, all active members in this neighborhood, have lived and worked there for a while. They tell the story of many such transformations across the landscape through the lens of one case study.</p>
topic estonia
gentrification
urban revitalization
post-socialist
historical wooden architecture
cultural value
social diversity.
url https://rtsa.ro/tras/index.php/tras/article/view/63
work_keys_str_mv AT marthiob risenfromthedeadfromslummingtogentrification
AT nelenutt risenfromthedeadfromslummingtogentrification
AT sulevnurme risenfromthedeadfromslummingtogentrification
AT fransescodeluca risenfromthedeadfromslummingtogentrification
_version_ 1721353501656743936