ABSTRACT
This article examines the emergence of urban heritage walks on the Gold Coast, Australia. As a popular beachside mass tourism destination, the Gold Coast has a longstanding reputation for rapid development and for lacking historical and cultural depth. In this context, heritage walks present an opportunity to reorient the city’s identity and to stage a sense of heritage in the urban environment. Focusing on a case study of the Gold Coast’s Southport Heritage Walk (SHW), this article aims to analyse the discursive, material and political dimensions of urban heritage walks, and how practices of heritage unfold in places marked by rapidly changing urban landscapes and resident populations. Drawing on observational fieldwork, as well as interviews with key individuals involved in designing the walks, the article discusses the dominant narratives of history and urban identity enshrined in the SHW, and how these discourses are encountered and interpreted within the context of the contemporary materialities of lived space. Although the SHW aims to highlight the city as a place with a rich history and heritage, the walk’s missing interpretive markers and scarce remnants of built heritage instead emphasise the city’s ongoing tensions between development and preservation.
Acknowledgements
Thank you to Elspeth Lee for her valuable research assistance during this project, Professor Sarah Baker and Associate Professor Patricia Wise for their feedback on an early draft of the article, and the two anonymous referees for their constructive feedback.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
Notes on contributor
Zelmarie Cantillon is a postdoctoral research fellow at Griffith University, Australia. She is author of Resort Spatiality: Reimagining Sites of Mass Tourism (2019, Routledge) and co-editor of The Routledge Companion to Popular Music History and Heritage (2018, Routledge) and Remembering Popular Music’s Past: Memory–Heritage–History (2019, Anthem Press). Her research explores the intersections between spatiality, heritage, tourism and popular culture.
ORCID
Zelmarie Cantillon http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9869-217X