TY - JOUR
T1 - SURVIVING SUPERGENTRIFICATION IN INNER CITY SYDNEY
T2 - Adaptive Spaces and Makeshift Economies of Cultural Production
AU - Pollio, Andrea
AU - Magee, Liam
AU - Ang, Ien
AU - Rowe, David
AU - Stevenson, Deborah
AU - Swist, Teresa
AU - Wong, Alexandra
N1 - The research underlying this article was commissioned and funded by by the City of Sydney and the Inner West Council. We are grateful, in particular, for the contributions of Ianto Ware, Lisa Colley (COS), Amanda Buckland and Freya Ververis (IWC). We extend our gratitude to the 38 informants who kindly participated in the research, welcoming our team into their warehouses and offices. The research was conducted on unceded land owned by the Gadigal and Wangal peoples of the Eora nation. We also acknowledge the IJURR reviewers and handling editor whose generous comments helped the article take its final shape.
PY - 2021/9
Y1 - 2021/9
N2 - Artists and creative workers have long been recognized as playing an important role in gentrification, being often portrayed as forerunners of urban change and displacement in former industrial and working-class suburbs of ‘post-Fordist’ cities. However, as is well represented by recent research, the relationship between the arts, gentrification and displacement has been called into question. The purpose of this article, which draws on 30 case studies of creative spaces in Sydney's inner suburbs, is to chart some of the strategies of spatial adaptation and makeshift economies of solidarity that cultural workers adopt in order to keep living and working in areas of ‘supergentrification’. We document how cultural infrastructure is transformed by the gentrification process and argue that these alterations are critical to the survival of arts and culture in the city. Such makeshift economies contribute, in a practical way, to preserving the diversity that gentrification is sometimes deemed to destroy or displace. While the survival of creative spaces is a much less researched phenomenon than other forms of resistance or displacement, we suggest that it has important consequences for both research and policy decisions around gentrification, infrastructural development and urban cultural economies.
AB - Artists and creative workers have long been recognized as playing an important role in gentrification, being often portrayed as forerunners of urban change and displacement in former industrial and working-class suburbs of ‘post-Fordist’ cities. However, as is well represented by recent research, the relationship between the arts, gentrification and displacement has been called into question. The purpose of this article, which draws on 30 case studies of creative spaces in Sydney's inner suburbs, is to chart some of the strategies of spatial adaptation and makeshift economies of solidarity that cultural workers adopt in order to keep living and working in areas of ‘supergentrification’. We document how cultural infrastructure is transformed by the gentrification process and argue that these alterations are critical to the survival of arts and culture in the city. Such makeshift economies contribute, in a practical way, to preserving the diversity that gentrification is sometimes deemed to destroy or displace. While the survival of creative spaces is a much less researched phenomenon than other forms of resistance or displacement, we suggest that it has important consequences for both research and policy decisions around gentrification, infrastructural development and urban cultural economies.
KW - arts
KW - cultural infrastructure
KW - culture
KW - makeshift economies
KW - supergentrification
KW - Sydney
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U2 - 10.1111/1468-2427.13015
DO - 10.1111/1468-2427.13015
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85108210048
SN - 0309-1317
VL - 45
SP - 778
EP - 794
JO - International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
JF - International Journal of Urban and Regional Research
IS - 5
ER -