Land remediation in Glasgow's East End: a “sustainability fix” for whose benefit?

García-Lamarca, M. and Gray, N. (2021) Land remediation in Glasgow's East End: a “sustainability fix” for whose benefit? In: Anguelovski, I. and Connolly, J. J.T. (eds.) The Green City and Social Injustice: 21 Tales from North America and Europe. Series: Routledge equity, justice and the sustainable city series. Routledge: Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY, pp. 100-110. ISBN 9781032024110 (doi: 10.4324/9781003183273-10)

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Abstract

Following an industrial boom from the mid-to-late 19th century, Glasgow’s East End underwent exceptional levels of industrial decline. By the 1960s, it suffered from wholesale abandonment and devaluation, visible through widespread swathes of vacant and derelict land and decrepit building structures. After several unsuccessful regeneration attempts over the decades, in 2007 Glasgow City Council (G.C.C.) won the bid to host the 2014 Commonwealth Games in the East End. In 2008, the same area was subject to the largest regeneration project in Scotland––Clyde Gateway––rooted in sustainability discourses and the provision of new green and blue infrastructure. Clyde Gateway has invested hundreds of millions of public funds across 840 hectares of land, 350 hectares of which was defined as surplus, vacant, derelict, polluted or in need of substantial infrastructural investment. This chapter explores whether substantial benefits from regeneration are in fact trickling down to the local community through the measures being implemented, or whether the “sustainability fix” merely operates to legitimize and accommodate the contradictory impulses of profit-making urbanism and environmentalism. In essence this chapter asks: for whom are the new businesses, jobs, homes and green-blue infrastructure, and at what cost?

Item Type:Book Sections
Status:Published
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Gray, Mr Neil
Authors: García-Lamarca, M., and Gray, N.
College/School:College of Social Sciences > Adam Smith Business School > Management
Publisher:Routledge
ISBN:9781032024110
Published Online:30 November 2021
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2022 The contributors
First Published:First published in The Green City and Social Injustice: 21 Tales from North America and Europe: 100-110
Publisher Policy:Reproduced in accordance with the publisher copyright policy

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