Property-based redevelopment and gentrification: the case of Seoul, South Korea
The urban experiences of South Korea in times of its rapid urbanisation and economic growth show that wholesale redevelopment had been a dominant approach to urban renewal, leading to redevelopment-induced gentrification. This was led by a programme known as the Joint Redevelopment Programme, transforming urban space that was once dominated by informal settlements into high-rise commercial housing estates. This paper tries to explain how this approach was possible at city-wide scale in its capital city, Seoul. Through the examination of redevelopment processes in a case study neighbourhood, it puts forward three arguments. First, the development potential arising from the rent gap expansion through under-utilisation of dilapidated neighbourhoods provided material conditions for the sustained implementation of property-based redevelopment projects. Second, this paper critically examines the dynamics of socio-political relations among various property-based interests embedded in redevelopment neighbourhoods, and argues that external property-based interests have enabled the full exploitation of development opportunities at the expense of poor owner-occupiers and tenants. Third, South Korea had been noted for its strong developmental state with minimum attention to redistributive social policies. The Joint Redevelopment Programme in Seoul was effectively a market-oriented, profit-led renewal approach, in line with a national housing strategy that favoured increased housing production and home-ownership at the expense of local poor residents’ housing needs.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Copyright holders | © 2009 Elsevier |
| Keywords | ISI, urban redevelopment, real estate capital, rent gap; informal settlements, gentrification; Seoul; South Korea |
| Departments | Geography and Environment |
| DOI | 10.1016/j.geoforum.2009.06.009 |
| Date Deposited | 03 Aug 2009 10:17 |
| URI | https://researchonline.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/24690 |