Blending architecture, social psychology and urban history, the article approaches
demolition from a critical perspective in the light of the ongoing privatisation of urban space
and the sidelining of resident voices in the face of urban transformation. Understanding the
erosion of familiar environments through urban development as a highly class-dependent
dismantling of community ties, the examples of Shieldfield and Heaton are compared,
two adjacent neighbourhoods in Newcastle upon Tyne, UK that display radically different
approaches to urban residential transformation. Measures of ontological security and sense
of place are employed to distinguish the points at which the concept of demolition diverges
in the minds of the residents, given the increasing pressures of studentification in one
neighbourhood and gentrification in the other. The resident perspective on demolition shows
a deep need for a sense of belonging and control, with community ownership emerging as a
potential solution.
Disparity of ontological security and sense of place between two neighbourhoods in Newcastle upon Tyne.
Abstract
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Bell Holmström I. (2025) "Disparity of ontological security and sense of place between two neighbourhoods in Newcastle upon Tyne.
", Regional Studies and Local Development, 6(2), 125-156. DOI: 10.25430/pupj-RSLD-2025-2-5
Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Regional Studies and Local Development
Volume
6
Issue Number
2
Start Page
125
Last Page
156
Date Published
12/2025
ISSN Number
2784-8361
Serial Article Number
5
DOI
10.25430/pupj-RSLD-2025-2-5
Issue
Section
Articles