A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Chasing the rent gap down on Edinburgh’s waterfront
Despite the affluence of its city centre, Edinburgh’s waterfront remains a largely undeveloped patchwork of ex-industrial docklands. The Waterfront Edinburgh project in the early 2000s was an ambitious attempt to regenerate the former Granton Harbour. This paper takes a long-term view of the fate of that project—from grand potential, through stagnation and crisis, and back again to grand potential—to consider anew the use of the rent gap model in a context where gentrification seems to have failed. Threading together the changing fate of this site reveals the imaginary nature of potential and the limits to the state’s power, whilst reminding us that potential land values can (and must) go down as well as up.
Chasing the rent gap down on Edinburgh’s waterfront
Despite the affluence of its city centre, Edinburgh’s waterfront remains a largely undeveloped patchwork of ex-industrial docklands. The Waterfront Edinburgh project in the early 2000s was an ambitious attempt to regenerate the former Granton Harbour. This paper takes a long-term view of the fate of that project—from grand potential, through stagnation and crisis, and back again to grand potential—to consider anew the use of the rent gap model in a context where gentrification seems to have failed. Threading together the changing fate of this site reveals the imaginary nature of potential and the limits to the state’s power, whilst reminding us that potential land values can (and must) go down as well as up.
Chasing the rent gap down on Edinburgh’s waterfront
Kallin, Hamish (author)
City ; 25 ; 614-633
2021-11-02
20 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
British Library Online Contents | 2005
|Edinburgh's Scottish Parliament building
British Library Online Contents | 2000
|British Library Online Contents | 1999
|All aboard? Edinburgh's ambition - Glasgow's memory
British Library Online Contents | 2006
|