MALASAÑA, MALASANA
Mapping gentrification over the years in Calle San Vicente Ferrer.
Project for “Quantitative Methods”, Prof. María Esteban, October-November 2023.
Project for “Quantitative Methods”, Prof. María Esteban, October-November 2023.
CONTEXT
Please note that the introduction is a part of the final submission explaining the origins of the concept and defining the street segment that will be mapped.
INTRODUCTION
After observing the commercial space, I realized that they could be sorted by orientation based on their interior design: the “vintage bulb” cafes catering to international tourists, “flowery” niche cuisine restaurants, “backlit liquor cabinet” bars that repurpose vintage aesthetics, “repurposed decor” restaurants that serve high-end cuisine, and “tabernas”, that existed before the tourism boom.
“Localities can be more closely connected to sites thousands of miles away than to their immediate surroundings.” (Dodge et al., 2011) Gentrification is one of the main issues that Malasaña in general has to deal with, and the existence of several “layers” of business types in the street is evidence of the remarketing of the area as a “tourist-friendly area” with the erosion of the local Spanish cultural appeal of old establishments that were closed and converted into an “international”-centric commercial preference.
My idea is to create an “timeline of old to new” layering system that showcases the old uses of the commercial space of SVF, and how they have been superseded over the years with newer establishments, how it led to the birth to the aforementioned categories, and how the complex structure of the timeline of SVF’s development.
RESEARCH PROCESS
The second part was identifying what I am mapping; I wanted to map the changes to each locale, indicate certain categories of stores and ‘aesthetics’ that I had identified, and highlight businesses with an interesting background that is relevant to the problem of gentrification that was reported in the news.
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