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      REGENERATION OF A DECAYING URBAN INDUSTRIAL AREA DRIVEN BY ENDOGENOUS HOME INDUSTRIES: A CASE STUDY OF MARÉ FAVELA, RIO DE JANEIRO

      research-article
      , * ,
      Journal of Green Building
      College Publishing
      urban industrial area, favela, regeneration, home industry, bottom-up pattern

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          ABSTRACT

          Favelas are low-income urban communities in Brazil, and Maré in Rio de Janeiro has the largest cluster of favelas in the country. The prevailing view of a unique, regulated, and normative city conflicts with the reality of the continued expansion of the favelas, posing challenges for architects and urban planners in developing new strategies for integrating informal areas with the main city. This study focused on a decaying industrial area adjacent to the Maré favelas and explored a sustainable path for improving both the quality of the built environment and the quality of life of the residents. Effective infrastructure and socioeconomic links between the favelas and the city were proposed. The home production model that emerged from the favelas inspired the use of the abandoned industrial area as a home-industry incubator. The study proposed an urban regeneration strategy involving a bottom-up industry-space process evolving from home industries to group industries, and finally to larger community industries. This strategy can accelerate Maré’s development and integration with the city of Rio de Janeiro.

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          Most cited references12

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          Is Open Access

          Housing in “intramural favelas”: Considerations on new forms of urban expansion in contemporary times

          This paper develops a deeper look into new residential appropriations of space in marginalized areas of a large Brazilian city, while highlighting the subjective importance of housing and its meaning beyond the idea of shelter. Firstly, it presents a brief history of Rio de Janeiro's favelas - the local version of slums - and its relationship with vacant land over the past 100 years. Then, it explains the value of self-built housing and its contribution to the consolidation of multiple and hybrid territories, highlighting their subjective character. Lastly, it presents a case study called Portelinha, located in a set of favelas known as the Maré Complex, stressing how this mixed occupation has transformed the local urban fabric, leading to the emergence of what is referred to as an “intramural favela”. This phenomenon consists of the self-construction of a smaller-scale set of houses within the walls of a former factory turned into an industrial void in the 1990s. The analysis shows how this housing appropriation is articulated with other activities, especially cultural ones, leading to a diversity of social actors, alliances and conflicts, turning it into a real disputed territory. Cases like this reflect the challenges with which architects and planners need to deal with when working in the unequal urban contexts that are so common in the Global South.
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            Devas—Maré’s Women Artisans

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              Citizenship laboratory: creativity and resistance in Maré slums

              O. Raposo, (2015)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                jgrb
                Journal of Green Building
                College Publishing
                1943-4618
                1552-6100
                Spring 2021
                10 June 2021
                : 16
                : 2
                : 237-248
                Author notes

                1. School of Architecture, Xi’an University of Architecture and Technology, Xi’an, Shaanxi, China. Email: puruier533@ 123456xauat.edu.cn

                2. School of Architecture, Xi’an University of Architecture and Technology, Xi’an, Shaanxi, China. Email: xalihao@ 123456126.com

                ( *Corresponding author)
                Article
                jgb.16.2.237
                10.3992/jgb.16.2.237
                953ea181-6301-463d-bbf8-00f1827fa3b6
                History
                Page count
                Pages: 12
                Categories
                INDUSTRY CORNER

                Urban design & Planning,Civil engineering,Environmental management, Policy & Planning,Architecture,Environmental engineering
                regeneration,bottom-up pattern,urban industrial area,home industry,favela

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