Spurred by Privatization, Beirut's Working Class is Colonizing the City's Periphery

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27 years after the Lebanese Civil War (1975 – 1990), Beirut finds itself a city of conflicting personalities. A summer night stroll through the recently completed Zaitunay Bay Marina flaunts the capital’s ongoing facelift. What GQ calls “the chosen destination for young rich cool kids across the globe” is now peppered with glitzy glass-clad high rises, world-class nightclubs, droves of foreign tourists, and high-profile architecture. A Steven Holl-designed yacht club is just minutes away from Herzog & de Meuron’s Beirut Terraces, a luxury condominium skyscraper overlooking a seaside promenade that the resort refers to as an “urban beach.” However, this inner-city development has also had extreme consequences on the city's periphery, as shown clearly in this photoset by Manuel Alvarez Diestro.

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Cite: Thomas Musca. "Spurred by Privatization, Beirut's Working Class is Colonizing the City's Periphery" 31 May 2017. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/872480/spurred-by-privatization-beiruts-working-class-is-colonizing-the-citys-periphery> ISSN 0719-8884

© Manuel Alvarez Diestro

私有化迫使贝鲁特的工人阶级迁徙到城市外围

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