To read this content please select one of the options below:

Urban Transformations in the Culture of Santiago's Barrios

Dr. Beatriz Maturana (Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism, Universidad de Chile)
Dr. Anthony McInneny (School of Architecture and Built Environment, University of Newcastle)
Dr. Marcelo Bravo (Faculty of Architecture and Urbanism, Universidad de Chile)

Open House International

ISSN: 0168-2601

Article publication date: 1 December 2019

38

Abstract

Within Santiago, Chile's capital city, Barrio is a fundamental urban concept: an identity of place that defines a social space more than the territorial boundary of a designated area. Nearly 30 years of sustained, economic growth have positioned Chile, and Santiago with 40% of the country's population, as a tourist, financial and investment centre for South America. After a general decline of the inner-city area during the time of dictatorship (1973-1990), three inner-city residential barrios are being re-defined by their social and urban heritage as part of the “coolest” city of South America. These residential barrios possess the social characteristics of an urban unit within the concept of an ethical city—autonomy, conviviality, connectivity and diversity—and, in form and use, the basis of urban cultural tourism, a living heritage of residential architecture, public space and urban culture. The spatial and economic transformation of these barrios shifts the existing dynamic between the residents' social capital and the barrios' symbolic capital to the question of whose rights and interest should prevail. Through a literature review, policy review and an analysis of morphology and land use of three barrios, this article draws lessons to assist a re-thinking of the development of this urban, social-spatial unit of Chilean cities.

Keywords

Citation

Maturana, B., McInneny, A. and Bravo, M. (2019), "Urban Transformations in the Culture of Santiago's Barrios", Open House International, Vol. 44 No. 4, pp. 20-26. https://doi.org/10.1108/OHI-04-2019-B0004

Publisher

:

Open House International

Copyright © 2019 Open House International

Related articles