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Property, housing and processes of gentrification : a case study of the neighborhood of Mar Mikhael (Beirut) -

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dc.contributor.author El Samad, Daria Ziad,
dc.date.accessioned 2017-12-11T16:24:46Z
dc.date.available 2017-12-11T16:24:46Z
dc.date.issued 2016
dc.date.submitted 2016
dc.identifier.other b19134472
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10938/20892
dc.description Thesis. M.U.P.P. American University of Beirut. Department of Architecture and Design, 2016. ET:6545
dc.description Advisor : Dr. Mona Fawaz, Associate Professor, Architecture and Design ; Committee Members : Dr. Mona Harb, Associate Dean and Professor, Architecture and Design ; Dr. Jad Chaaban, Assistant Professor, Agricultural Sciences.
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 75-77)
dc.description.abstract Since 1940, a rent control regulation has constrained more than half the units in the neighborhood of Mar Mikhael (Beirut, Lebanon) to lower than market-value rates. More than 70 years later, currency devaluation, thousands of restrictions and impediments and the increasing price of land has produced a major gap between the current market value of most neighborhood apartments and their current rent, as it is collected by property owners. While proponents of market adjustments have convinced the parliament to pass a new regulation that lifts the ceiling on rent, the materialization of these new policies on the ground appear enormous. Indeed, thousands of elderly long-time neighborhood residents are threatened with imminent displacement. The trend has been exacerbated by the fact that most of the neighborhood properties have now been inherited by multiple family members, many of whom are absentee landlords. Building on a theoretical framework that approaches the question of gentrification from the standpoint of property value and the rent gap, this thesis argues that the ongoing transformations of the neighborhood are made possible by the very structure of the property market that disempowers both small-scale landlords and old time tenants and favors the take-over of property by large-scale developers who actually reap the profits generated by the accumulated rent gap. It further shows that this same structure of property limits the ways in which the neighborhood can be claimed, reducing the possibility of negotiation for evicted neighborhood dwellers to the amount of compensations, while other forms of claiming the neighborhood on the basis of past use, for example, are denied (Blomley 2004). The data gathered for this thesis include the records of 86 property-titles in the neighborhood, 30 interviews with neighborhood dwellers and 3 interviews with developers who have worked in the neighborhood. Additional information was available from participation in a workshop in Mar Mikhael in May 2015.
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (x, 77 leaves) : illustrations (some color), maps.
dc.language.iso eng
dc.relation.ispartof Theses, Dissertations, and Projects
dc.subject.classification ET:006545
dc.subject.lcsh Housing policy -- Lebanon -- Beirut -- Mar Mikhael -- Case studies.
dc.subject.lcsh Property -- Social aspects -- Lebanon -- Beirut -- Mar Mikhael -- Case studies.
dc.subject.lcsh Gentrification -- Lebanon -- Beirut -- Mar Mikhael -- Case studies.
dc.subject.lcsh Neighborhoods -- Lebanon -- Beirut -- Mar Mikhael -- Case studies.
dc.subject.lcsh City planning -- Lebanon -- Beirut -- Mar Mikhael -- Case studies.
dc.subject.lcsh Land use, Urban -- Lebanon -- Beirut -- Mar Mikhael -- Case studies.
dc.title Property, housing and processes of gentrification : a case study of the neighborhood of Mar Mikhael (Beirut) -
dc.type Thesis
dc.contributor.department Faculty of Engineering and Architecture.
dc.contributor.department Department of Architecture and Design,
dc.contributor.institution American University of Beirut.


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