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Commodification of Public Space: The Case of Hong Kong

Chan, Elton LU orcid (2019) Lund Urban Creativity Conference 2019
Abstract
Much of the debates surrounding public space is currently centred on privatisation and how it has contributed to the erosion of publicness in public space. However, public ownership and management of public space does not necessarily guarantee its accessibility, inclusivity and publicness – highly curated and regulated public space that are publicly funded and operated can be just as restrictive and problematic. This is particularly evident in cities like Hong Kong, where public space often plays an important role in the state-led gentrification and regeneration that has become increasingly a commonplace across the urban centre. Drawing upon the social production of its public spaces, this paper suggests that commodification has become the... (More)
Much of the debates surrounding public space is currently centred on privatisation and how it has contributed to the erosion of publicness in public space. However, public ownership and management of public space does not necessarily guarantee its accessibility, inclusivity and publicness – highly curated and regulated public space that are publicly funded and operated can be just as restrictive and problematic. This is particularly evident in cities like Hong Kong, where public space often plays an important role in the state-led gentrification and regeneration that has become increasingly a commonplace across the urban centre. Drawing upon the social production of its public spaces, this paper suggests that commodification has become the predominant process that is shaping public space development in Hong Kong. By prioritising exchange value in public space practice and neglecting the needs of its users, the commodification of public space has led to the recent decline of public space in Hong Kong. This paper will conclude by looking back at the Umbrella Movement and how the Occupy protest site was an ideal example of an open and dynamic public space that can inspire future public space development in Hong Kong and abroad. (Less)
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author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
unpublished
subject
conference name
Lund Urban Creativity Conference 2019
conference location
Lund, Sweden
conference dates
2019-05-15 - 2019-05-18
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
7766e824-e64a-421c-ba56-17866f824014
date added to LUP
2019-05-16 09:46:21
date last changed
2019-05-16 10:36:44
@misc{7766e824-e64a-421c-ba56-17866f824014,
  abstract     = {{Much of the debates surrounding public space is currently centred on privatisation and how it has contributed to the erosion of publicness in public space. However, public ownership and management of public space does not necessarily guarantee its accessibility, inclusivity and publicness – highly curated and regulated public space that are publicly funded and operated can be just as restrictive and problematic. This is particularly evident in cities like Hong Kong, where public space often plays an important role in the state-led gentrification and regeneration that has become increasingly a commonplace across the urban centre. Drawing upon the social production of its public spaces, this paper suggests that commodification has become the predominant process that is shaping public space development in Hong Kong. By prioritising exchange value in public space practice and neglecting the needs of its users, the commodification of public space has led to the recent decline of public space in Hong Kong. This paper will conclude by looking back at the Umbrella Movement and how the Occupy protest site was an ideal example of an open and dynamic public space that can inspire future public space development in Hong Kong and abroad.}},
  author       = {{Chan, Elton}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Commodification of Public Space: The Case of Hong Kong}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}