Over the past decade, large parts of Britain's cities have been redeveloped as privately-owned estates, extending corporate control over some of the country's busiest squares and thoroughfares.
These developments are no longer simply enclosed malls like Westfield in White City or business districts like Broadgate in the City of London – they are spaces open to the sky which appear to be entirely public to casual passers-by.
It appears from the scale of the change that privatisation of space is now the standard price of redevelopment.
There are, of course, significant benefits to the redevelopments, though some worry that Britain's landscape is being slowly redefined by private ownership in two ways.As the Occupy protest highlighted, private owners can refuse right of entry to members of the public, closing off swaths of the city.Critics also warn that these spaces are being designed on a corporate model which favours ornamental designs – and high levels of footfall for retailers – while community spirit and sustainability are far from a priority.
The Nemesis Project aims to expose and dismantle the grip that corporations and big business hold over our daily lives. Our vision is a future free from corporate power and domination.
Monday, June 11, 2012
Public space in private and corporate hands
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