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Articles

Valparaíso: Touristification and displacement in a UNESCO city

Pages 1192-1204 | Published online: 05 Jun 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Tourism has become a sector that is transforming historic areas of the current city. Its impact on the quality of life of communities, local economy, access to affordable housing, urban landscape, is being analyzed from studies on gentrification and touristification. This article analyzes the case of Valparaíso (Chile) and how the declaration of its historic area as a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2003, triggered a process of touristification. Through public programmes and private investment, houses were transformed into tourist shops and hotels, shaping a tourist bubble in these residential areas. How inhabitants felt and experienced the tourist transformation of their neighborhoods was analyzed through the use of interviews. The residents reports material and symbolic changes in their living conditions, which are experienced as pressure by displacement from their neighborhood. A pressure expressed in the loss of privacy, depopulation and loss of community networks, the displacement of neighborhood shops, the increase in property taxes, and the absence of public subsidies to rehabilitate their homes. The results place pressure by displacement as one of the main mechanisms of dispossession in historic areas of Latin American cities and suggest that in cities configured from neoliberal urban policies the UNESCO designation acts as a device that strengthens this dispossession.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Correction Statement

This article has been corrected with minor changes. These changes do not impact the academic content of the article.

Notes

1. UNESCO declared the historic quarter as a WHS composed of the subsectors of (1) Sotomayor square, Justicia square, and Baron dock; (2) Prat street and Turri square quarter, plus surroundings; (3) La Matriz church and Santo Domingo square quarter; (4) Sotomayor and Justicia square and the Prat pier; (5) Echaurren square and Serrano street quarter, plus surroundings; (7) Cerro Alegre and Cerro Concepción quarter (see ).

Additional information

Funding

This research was funded by the Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico, Project N° 11190465.

Notes on contributors

César Cáceres-Seguel

César Cáceres-Seguel is a researcher in urban studies at the Center for Social Inclusion and Innovation of the Universidad Viña del Mar in Chile. Cesar researches in three main areas: (1) sociospatial segregation in the Chilean city, (2) gentrification and touristification, (3) and neighborhood planning. Caceres´work has been published in journals of México, Spain, Canada, the United States, Argentina, Colombia, and Chile.

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