TY - JOUR
T1 - View Corridors, Access, and Belonging in the Contested City: Vancouver’s Protected View Cones, the Urban Commons, Protest, and Decisionmaking for Sustainable Urban Development and the Management of a City’s Public Assets
AU - Ross, Sara Gwendolyn
N1 - Sara Ross, “View Corridors, Access, and Belonging in the Contested City: Vancouver’s Protected View Cones, the Urban Commons, and Decision-Making for Sustainable Urban Development and the Management of a City’s Public Assets”, (2020) 5 JL Property & Society 101.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Majestic views of mountains, sky, and sea are essential components of the visual and experiential identity of Vancouver, Canada. The experience of these vistas supplements other urban realities, such as suffocating living expenses and inequality. This Article explores a recent example of urban contestation over Vancouver’s view corridors as a shared public resource and public asset. As this Article explores, exclusion from access to public assets that provide meaning to daily life — such as the mountain views in question — damage an urban citizen’s sense of identity and belonging in a city through a hierarchical experience of access and possession. Through the example of contestation over the management and preservation of Vancouver’s view corridors, and the digitally networked connective action and protest that resulted, this Article also engages the notion of the urban commons as a lens through which these urban contestations can be framed and situates the relevance of these questions of access of urban citizens to public views within the context of UN-Habitat’s New Urban Agenda and UNESCO’S “Recommendation on the Historic Urban Landscape.”
AB - Majestic views of mountains, sky, and sea are essential components of the visual and experiential identity of Vancouver, Canada. The experience of these vistas supplements other urban realities, such as suffocating living expenses and inequality. This Article explores a recent example of urban contestation over Vancouver’s view corridors as a shared public resource and public asset. As this Article explores, exclusion from access to public assets that provide meaning to daily life — such as the mountain views in question — damage an urban citizen’s sense of identity and belonging in a city through a hierarchical experience of access and possession. Through the example of contestation over the management and preservation of Vancouver’s view corridors, and the digitally networked connective action and protest that resulted, this Article also engages the notion of the urban commons as a lens through which these urban contestations can be framed and situates the relevance of these questions of access of urban citizens to public views within the context of UN-Habitat’s New Urban Agenda and UNESCO’S “Recommendation on the Historic Urban Landscape.”
KW - New Urban Agenda
KW - UNESCO
KW - View Corridors
KW - Public Resources
KW - Urban Commons
UR - https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/scholarly_works/1426
M3 - Article
JO - Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
JF - Articles, Book Chapters, & Popular Press
ER -