La expansión urbana y procesos sociales en Yerba Buena (Gran San Miguel de Tucumán, Tucumán)

Argentina in the booming housing was closed in the late eighties and early nineties occurred in major cities: Buenos Aires (2003 Janoschka; Svampa 2003), Rosario (Braga et al 2003), Mendoza (Roitman 2003) and Tucumán (Malizia and Paolasso 2007). The phenomenon of the closed housing is also reprodu...

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Autor principal: Malizia, Matilde
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Acceso en línea:https://bdigital.uncu.edu.ar/fichas.php?idobjeto=3258
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Sumario:Argentina in the booming housing was closed in the late eighties and early nineties occurred in major cities: Buenos Aires (2003 Janoschka; Svampa 2003), Rosario (Braga et al 2003), Mendoza (Roitman 2003) and Tucumán (Malizia and Paolasso 2007). The phenomenon of the closed housing is also reproduced on a smaller scale in cities such as Greater San Miguel de Tucumán-GSMT (Mertins 1995). This paper analyzes the spatial distribution of housing closed, changes in urban structure and social processes resulting from the interaction between those inside and those outside. It focuses on the town of Yerba Buena, located west of GSMT, since the largest number of closed neighborhoods of cities; in 2005 and had built 45 such ventures. At present in this area combines social housing, illegal occupation of land, settlements and residential developments for the middle class and upper (Müller 2000/01; Mertins 1995). The latter drive the formation of a CBD in rapid expansion and the construction of shopping centers, entertainment and others in advance of its borders. This expansion produces, in turn, the fragmentation of the city that is manifested in a tendency towards a "city of islands," as expressed Janoschka (2002) in his new model of analysis of the Latin American metropolis.