The Mayor of Barcelona, Joan Clos, has blamed low density
planning for the lack of social and economic life in Barcelona's Olympic Village
and Diagonal Mar districts. There are few people on the streets and public
space, shops or bar terraces are little used by the neighbours. This has led to
plans for a greater density of dwellings in the two new districts that the City
Council is designing, in Zona Franca and Nou Barris.
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Olympic Village: empty streets
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In the Mayor's defence of the compact and dense city –
building upwards rather than outwards – the Eixample of Ildefons Cerdà is
seen as a success. The Eixample has 150 dwellings per hectare, creating a
district “where yes, there is life”. For Clos, the Olympic Village with 60
dwellings per hectare, is an example of what should not be done in city
planning. The adjacent Diagonal Mar hyper-community with even lower densities -
48 dwellings per hectare - is seen as an urban development disaster, despite
winning an Urban Land Institute Award for Excellence. According to Clos, such
areas do not contribute to building a sense of the city. Density determines the
nature of community life and the kind of city created. Future projects should
involve the recovery of higher levels of density.
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Diagonal Mar: empty streets
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The British architect Richard Rogers has pointed out the
difficulty of achieving high density in city centres when housing markets value
low density. He stresses the tension that exists in urban development between
money, power and democracy.
Joan Clos was therefore guarded in his voicing his opinion,
since The Diagonal Mar project is supported by powerful developers and
home-building industry, as well as by public authorities earning their share in
the process. more
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