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Managing degrowth in tourist conurbations. The Valencian Model (Spain)
Póster presentado en 3rd International Conference on Degrowth Ecological Sustainability and Social Equity, Venezia, 19-23 September 2012. ; The first coastline of the Valencian region, is one of the more transformed around the Mediterranean areas. One of each two km is urbanized at the beginning of 21st century. The driving force behind this transformation for decades has been the tourist immigration, and specifically the real estate business linked to the second residence. Between 2004 and 2006, at the peak of the Spanish housing bubble, in this region were awarded licenses for 315 thousand new housing construction, as well as the ways of communication and tourist infrastructures linked to the phenomenon of urban expansion. In this context appeared some legal measures to contain the spatial and demographic growth that threatens the coastline. The new regional laws of urban and regional planning introduced thresholds to urban expansion and established a quota of sustainability to curb urbanization euphoria of many municipalities. But since 2007, paradoxically the capitalist crisis had hampered urban growth. In the opposite direction, the Valencian Government has suppressed the containment measures and has issued new laws to reactivate the real state and the tourist-tertiary complexes construction. These are measures that propose more bricks against the crisis of the brick. We carry out an assessment of the measures of the Valencian Government and propose a change of model, through the techniques and tools that it includes urban and territorial planning. The main objective is to show the possibilities of degrowth in land management and practical capabilities in the haunted spaces by the tourist-residential expansion.
Managing degrowth in tourist conurbations. The Valencian Model (Spain)
Póster presentado en 3rd International Conference on Degrowth Ecological Sustainability and Social Equity, Venezia, 19-23 September 2012. ; The first coastline of the Valencian region, is one of the more transformed around the Mediterranean areas. One of each two km is urbanized at the beginning of 21st century. The driving force behind this transformation for decades has been the tourist immigration, and specifically the real estate business linked to the second residence. Between 2004 and 2006, at the peak of the Spanish housing bubble, in this region were awarded licenses for 315 thousand new housing construction, as well as the ways of communication and tourist infrastructures linked to the phenomenon of urban expansion. In this context appeared some legal measures to contain the spatial and demographic growth that threatens the coastline. The new regional laws of urban and regional planning introduced thresholds to urban expansion and established a quota of sustainability to curb urbanization euphoria of many municipalities. But since 2007, paradoxically the capitalist crisis had hampered urban growth. In the opposite direction, the Valencian Government has suppressed the containment measures and has issued new laws to reactivate the real state and the tourist-tertiary complexes construction. These are measures that propose more bricks against the crisis of the brick. We carry out an assessment of the measures of the Valencian Government and propose a change of model, through the techniques and tools that it includes urban and territorial planning. The main objective is to show the possibilities of degrowth in land management and practical capabilities in the haunted spaces by the tourist-residential expansion.
Managing degrowth in tourist conurbations. The Valencian Model (Spain)
01.09.2012
Aufsatz (Konferenz)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
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