TY - JOUR
T1 - Spatial dynamics of incoming movers and the state-led gentrification process
T2 - The case of Rotterdam
AU - Janssen, Kyri Maaike Joey
AU - Cottineau-Mugadza, Clémentine
AU - Kleinhans, Reinout
AU - van Bueren, Ellen
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Although gentrification and its associated changes in residential mobility have been widely studied, surprisingly little attention has been paid to the changing origin locations of gentrification-related residential moves. In this study, we use fine-grained register data from the Dutch Central Bureau of Statistics to uncover changing residential mobility patterns to and within the city of Rotterdam, the Netherlands. We identify that the state-led gentrification process goes hand in hand with the changing socioeconomic characteristics of in-movers and the changing origin locations of residential moves. The city of Rotterdam increasingly attracts middle- to high-income households from other core cities in the Netherlands, a process that we understand as inter-urban gentrification spillover. In parallel, intra-urban moves by economically vulnerable residents are declining, especially toward and within gentrifying neighborhoods. This represents evidence of exclusionary displacement. We conclude that the spillover effects of contemporary gentrification should be understood beyond an intra-urban metropolitan perspective since gentrification in one city can enhance gentrification in another.
AB - Although gentrification and its associated changes in residential mobility have been widely studied, surprisingly little attention has been paid to the changing origin locations of gentrification-related residential moves. In this study, we use fine-grained register data from the Dutch Central Bureau of Statistics to uncover changing residential mobility patterns to and within the city of Rotterdam, the Netherlands. We identify that the state-led gentrification process goes hand in hand with the changing socioeconomic characteristics of in-movers and the changing origin locations of residential moves. The city of Rotterdam increasingly attracts middle- to high-income households from other core cities in the Netherlands, a process that we understand as inter-urban gentrification spillover. In parallel, intra-urban moves by economically vulnerable residents are declining, especially toward and within gentrifying neighborhoods. This represents evidence of exclusionary displacement. We conclude that the spillover effects of contemporary gentrification should be understood beyond an intra-urban metropolitan perspective since gentrification in one city can enhance gentrification in another.
KW - displacement
KW - gentrification
KW - housing
KW - residential mobility
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205224761&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/psp.2851
DO - 10.1002/psp.2851
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85205224761
SN - 1544-8444
VL - 30
JO - Population, Space and Place
JF - Population, Space and Place
IS - 8
M1 - e2851
ER -