The politics of public construction in a globalized world Imagining urban space in Ecuador
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| Award date | 28-06-2018 |
| Number of pages | 228 |
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| Abstract |
The study focuses on how projects of Ecuadorian public construction driven by the State and by city authorities are entangled with notions of globalization and modernity. To show this entanglement, I analyze the planning and construction process of four urban projects: the new Mariscal Sucre airport in Quito; the Millennium Communities in the Amazonian region; the Yachay university/technological hub located in the north of the country; and, finally, local monuments placed by municipal authorities on the northern coast. The first three case studies are State-driven and, due to their high cost and national impact, can be described as mega structures or mega projects (Flyvbjerg, 2014); the fourth provides an example of public construction driven by local interests. Each of these cases, approached through a close reading of planning documents, news coverage and interviews with key actors, and a fieldwork-based analysis of the projects’ spatial situation and use, reveals aspects of the dynamic relationship between urban planning, politics, spatial imaginaries (local, national and global) and socio-cultural values. Taken together, they show how the authorities and technicians driving urban construction adapt their projects to what they perceive as a modern and/or globalized context. Each structure, once built, is seen to reflect the imaginaries, dreams and desired futures authorities and technicians have in mind when thinking about urban space and its design.
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| Document type | PhD thesis |
| Language | English |
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