Urban regeneration area
Introduction
The term urban renewal was coined around 1950 by Miles Calean, an American economist, and refers to the reconversion of the buildings, equipment and infrastructure of a city, to adapt it to new uses and different activities. It is a complex phenomenon that can take very different paths and is related to other types of urban processes such as rehabilitation, redevelopment or invasion-succession. While urban renewal can be beneficial for a city, it can also lead to harmful phenomena for local communities, such as gentrification or misclassification as an irregular settlement by the leaders who promote the process.
Definitions
Rehabilitation
By rehabilitation we understand the increase in the quality of the structures up to a standard preset by the administration or the housing market.
Redevelopment
It refers to the demolition, rearrangement and reconstruction of an entire area.
Invasion-succession
It is a term developed widely by the Chicago school, it refers to the replacement of the population of an area, usually as a consequence of a process of urban renewal.
Urban renewal
A definition of urban renewal is given by GREBLER (1965, p.13):
Background
The first urban renewal operations occurred in the early industrial city. In the century, works to rehabilitate and clean up working-class neighborhoods were undertaken in almost all medium-sized Western cities, works in which the demolition of walls played a determining role. Other operations carried out are the opening of communication axes and the construction of expansions that make the complex medieval plots permeable.
In the postmodern city, urban renewal operations are increasingly aimed at the rehabilitation of strategically located neighborhoods that suffer, as a consequence of this renovation, a considerable revaluation that becomes the main driving force of the action of private and public capital in the area, also provoking social movements.