- Title
- Gentrification in the Nelson Mandela Bay central business district
- Creator
- Mageda, Nomthandazo Christellene
- Subject
- Gentrification
- Subject
- Urban renewal-- South Africa -- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality Neighborhoods -- South Africa -- Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Municipality
- Date Issued
- 2020
- Date
- 2020
- Type
- Thesis
- Type
- Masters
- Type
- MSc
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/10948/46119
- Identifier
- vital:39498
- Description
- Gentrification is the process by which middle-class residents settle inner city neighborhood previously occupied by working-class. Gentrification has long been viewed as a consumption phenomenon, which is triggered by the urge of a certain fraction of a middle class – gentrifies – to create and maintain distinction. The research is designed as a socio-economic account to discuss the development in the NMB CBD area. In my research I examine the multiscalar forces affecting neighborhood change. This study will also examine the elements affecting and also the benefits of the gentrification process using quantitative methods. The CBD of the NMB represents certain universalities of gentrification in an old city. Today the city is no longer the regular of development but instead its progenitor. Adopting the language of “urbanization” and “cities of the future” will be considered in gearing the economic development arm. It does so by an extensive mapping of gentrification processes in Port Elizabeth. It also contains a smaller study on gentrification in Cape Town and also on an international level. The outcomes provide telling insights into gentrification as a generic process affecting not just low income areas (classical gentrification) and high income areas (super-gentrification), but also a wide-ranging spectrum of medium-income areas (ordinary gentrification). This study examines the interdependent variables of gentrification, going beyond a profitable analysis and incorporating the voice of all the actors involved in the process of gentrification, using quantitative analysis. By taking into account all perspectives, this study permits a holistic understanding of the social costs and benefits associated with gentrification. As multifaceted as gentrification is, it is becoming more pervasive in cities globally, a holistic tally of the social costs and benefits of revitalization projects becoming imperative. The study concludes with discussions of the contributions, limitations, recommendations for the NMB CBD and other cities that are considering revitalizing their urban cores and implications for future research.
- Format
- viii, 82 leaves
- Format
- Publisher
- Nelson Mandela University
- Publisher
- Faculty of Engineering, the Built Environment and Technology
- Language
- English
- Rights
- Nelson Mandela University
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View Details Download | SOURCE1 | Mageda, NC 20451451 Treatise April 2020.pdf | 1 MB | Adobe Acrobat PDF | View Details Download |