Building an urban 'renaissance': fragmented services and the production of inequality in Greater Downtown Detroit.

Brian Doucet, Edske Smit
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

Downtown Detroit has been undergoing a renaissance in recent years which is in stark contrast to the economic and social situation in much of the rest of the city. This renaissance has been taking place despite the city's ability to provide good municipal services such as streetlights, security, public space and transport. This article focuses on how four areas which constitute part of Greater Downtown Detroit have relied on different combinations of actors to create and provide the services and amenities deemed necessary for capital investment and middle-class consumption. Each area has its own initiatives and actors who implement them, further fragmenting the city between its core and periphery. Renewed public spaces, private police forces and resident initiatives in middle-class neighborhoods have been created to serve specific needs of the small areas they serve. Rather than being unique, Detroit is an extreme example of fragmented and polarized urbanism which is part and parcel of contemporary cities. We argue that rather than passively reflecting existing socio-spatial divides, these private initiatives in Greater Downtown Detroit actively contribute to the production of sociospatial inequalities across the city.

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建设城市“复兴”:底特律大市中心服务的碎片化和不平等的产生。
近年来,底特律市中心正在经历复兴,这与城市其他大部分地区的经济和社会状况形成鲜明对比。尽管这座城市有能力提供良好的市政服务,如路灯、安全、公共空间和交通,但这种复兴一直在发生。本文关注的是构成底特律大市中心的四个区域如何依靠不同的参与者组合来创造和提供被认为是资本投资和中产阶级消费所必需的服务和便利设施。每个区域都有自己的倡议和实施这些倡议的参与者,进一步将城市划分为核心和外围。更新的公共空间,私人警察部队和中产阶级社区的居民倡议已经创建,以满足他们所服务的小区域的特定需求。与其说底特律是独一无二的,不如说它是支离破碎、两极分化的城市主义的一个极端例子,这是当代城市的重要组成部分。我们认为,这些私人举措并不是被动地反映了现有的社会空间鸿沟,而是积极地促成了整个城市的社会空间不平等。
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