4 research outputs found
LIFE in a ZOO: Henri Lefebvre and the (social) production of (abstract) space in Liverpool
Building on recent critical contributions towards conceptualising neighbourhood change as socially produced and politically âperformedâ, this paper takes a closer look at the work of Henri Lefebvre to understand the production of urban space as a deeply political process. A common critical characterisation of neighbourhood changeâoccurring through a grand Lefebvrean struggle between âabstract space-makersâ and âsocial space-makersââis critically examined through an in-depth historical case study of the Granby neighbourhood in Liverpool. Here, these forces are embodied respectively in technocratic state-led comprehensive redevelopment, notably Housing Market Renewal and its LIFE and ZOO zoning models; and in alternative community-led rehabilitation projects such as the Turner Prize-winning Granby Four Streets Community Land Trust. By tracing the surprisingly intimate interactions and multiple contradictions between these apparently opposing spatial projects, the production of neighbourhood is shown to be a complex, often violent political process, whose historical trajectories require disentangling in order to understand how we might construct better urban futures