Globalization and the Production of New Urban Spaces: Pacific Rim Megaprojects in the Late 20th Century
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space
- Vol. 27 (11) , 1713-1743
- https://doi.org/10.1068/a271713
Abstract
In this paper the complex and increasingly global processes which underlie the production of contemporary urban megaprojects (UMPs) in Pacific Rim cities are examined. The UMP development process is interesting to examine because it can be viewed as a microcosm of broader general processes which are impacting cities throughout the world. After a brief overview of the key dimensions of globalization processes [the development and restructuring of the international financial system; the globalization of property markets; the changing role of the transnational corporation; the stretching of social relations, world social networks, and epistemic communities (including the overseas Chinese); and travelling and networking] contemporary urban development trends in the Pacific Rim Basin are outlined to provide a context for UMP development. Three UMPs—in Vancouver (Pacific Place), Yokohama (Minato Mirai 21), and Shanghai (Lujiazui Central Area, Pudong)—are then examined in order to tease out complexities of globalization processes and the global—local dialectic. Attention throughout the paper is focused on international linkages and global context in influencing the production of these new urban spaces—spaces often designed (at extraordinary expense) to symbolize a global urban ‘utopia’ for the 21st century.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Social engineering, occupying powers and evictions: the case of Lhasa, TibetEnvironment and Urbanization, 1994
- THE NEW WAVE: PATTERNS OF JAPANESE DIRECT FOREIGN INVESTMENT IN CANADA DURING THE 1980SCanadian Geographies / Géographies canadiennes, 1994
- MARKETING VANCOUVER'S SERVICES TO THE ASIA PACIFICCanadian Geographies / Géographies canadiennes, 1994
- Immigration as Capital Accumulation: The Impact of Business Immigration to CanadaInternational Migration, 1993
- States and the future of global financeReview of International Studies, 1992
- Urbanization Issues in the Asian‐Pacific RegionAsian-Pacific Economic Literature, 1991
- Tourism UrbanizationInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 1991
- ECONOMIC RESTRUCTURING IN YOKOHAMA: FROM GATEWAY PORT TO INTERNATIONAL CORE CITYAsian Geographer, 1991
- TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND THE GLOBALIZATION OF FINANCIAL SERVICES∗The Professional Geographer, 1989
- The technopolis: high technology and regional development in JapanInternational Journal of Urban and Regional Research, 1988