2024-03-29T06:41:11Zhttps://uvadoc.uva.es/oai/requestoai:uvadoc.uva.es:10324/368862021-06-23T10:36:55Zcom_10324_1161com_10324_931com_10324_894col_10324_1319
Chapter 7 - From the imprint of history to the history of a brand: the case of the city of Puebla (Mexico)
Patiño Tovar, Elsa
Geografía
Urbanismo
Planificación territorial
Producción Científica
Disagreements in the city of Puebla’s life are endless. Misunderstanding has been present since the city was founded until today1. This situation has been getting progressively worse and a crisis is now unavoidable.
Without doubt, we are facing a crisis of communication and social harmony; the crisis of a concept and its implementation. The city is suffering from territorial segregation and social exclusion. Human interaction is fragmented by the polarisation resulting from the concentration of wealth and its correlation: poverty. The breakdown of the productive bases has generated very particular hotspots of physical degradation in the city: the historic centre and the irregular slums in the urban periphery. Poverty and mismatch is the principal image of this city in its historic settlement, as well as in the city that has been developed after.
The old city, today’s historic centre, was a misplaced idea, a recipient
with the wrong contents. Its foundation and growth were not the result
of an organic process defined from within. It was an a priori response,
rather than a social result (cf.: Patiño, 2001: 32-73). For this same reason,
the functionality of the city’s new activities is costly, inadequate and
insufficient. The relationship of the old city with the new is arbitrary
and not necessarily the best. Official plans were made to regulate the
growth of the new city, but the old city is not included. In any case,
this is not a serious problem, as it is only a political discourse. The
necessary investments to reverse the accumulated lag over centuries of
segregation are not being made. The new city does not compete with
the historic centre, yet it is the pretext to ignore both new and old.
What is important to highlight, is the fact that the new city is not
the result of the evolution of the old city. Quite simply, it is another city
with a different concept, under different precepts, yet maintaining the
dynamic of inequality. Thus, it can be understood that the old city centre
has, consequently, become isolated and that, despite everything, has for
a long time continued to be, of itself, a better city than the new one. The
delimitation of a historic monuments zone2 and the later declaration as
a World Heritage Site3 has not greatly modified the dynamic already
described. On the contrary, it has been an instrument of reinforcement.
2019-07-11T11:58:11Z
2019-07-11T11:58:11Z
2017
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
Manero Miguel, F.; García Cuesta, J. L. (Coords.) (2017): Territorial Heritage & Spatial Planning. A Geographical Perspective. Ed. Thomson Reuters. The Global Law Collection. Navarra. 327 págs. ISBN – 978-84-9152-762-6
978-84-9152-760-2
http://uvadoc.uva.es/handle/10324/36886
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198
From the imprint of history to the history of a brand: the case of the city of Puebla (Mexico)
eng
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
los autores
Thomson Reuters Aranzadi