2.1. Literature Review
There is an abundance of publications on the fields of architecture, communications, sociology, art and urban planning, including numerous studies of the relationships between these fields and how interaction between them can bring about transformations and new creations. Such studies range from academic articles or essays to photography series.
This article constitutes an attempt to go a step further and examine media and advertising interventions as initiatives capable of vesting derelict architectural spaces with value in the interests of promoting sustainability.
One of the pillars of this research is our interpretation of the sociologist Lefebvre’s [
3] notion of the right to the city. Lefebvre’s work offers some fascinating insights into urban space, which he understands in terms of the future, the possible, and the alternative, based on the logic of the immediate and the tangible.
Another interesting contribution in this respect has been offered by the architect Tschumi [
7], whose architectural projects are notable for the interrelation he establishes with events. Over the course of the 1970s, in both written texts and drawings, Tschumi highlighted the fact that architecture does not exist without events, actions, or activity. The first projects he developed recognized that buildings respond to and intensify the activities that occur within them, and that events creatively change and extend the structures they contain. In other words, architecture is not defined by its “formal” container but by its combinations of spaces, movements and events [
7]. Tschumi’s work has been exhibited in individual exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, the Venice Biennale of Architecture, the Netherlands Architecture Institute in Rotterdam, the Center Pompidou in Paris, and other museums and art galleries in the United States and Europe.
The imaginary dialogues or references that Lefebvre describes so precisely tie in well with the concept of New Babylon, conceived by Constant in 1956 in parallel with his participation in the Situationist International. We therefore refer here to publications on the exhibition of Constant’s work that was held at Museo Reina Sofía in 2016 [
4].
With the intention of bringing the ideas of these authors into the contemporary context, we also draw on short essays like
La ciudad en Movimiento [
8] and
Metrópolis Visionarias [
9], which help us to understand the current reality of urban planning and sociology, as well as publications in scientific journals and doctoral theses, of which Pinchart-Saavedra’s study titled
Rascacielos de Tokio a Babilonia la arquitectura como propaganda [
10] stands out for its role as an anchor for our analysis.
Moreover, bearing in mind the objective of promoting sustainability, this study considers the current scope of the concept of sustainability, i.e., in its environmental, social, economic, and cultural dimensions [
11]. This holistic conception of sustainability based on these four pillars represents a redefinition of economic policy and regional development for the reconstruction of urban space and of the social and cultural fabric [
12]. In this sense, Hawkes [
13] (p. 11) views culture as playing an essential role in public planning, pointing out that sustainability has four objectives: environmental responsibility, represented by ecological balance; economic viability, represented by prosperity; social equity, represented by social justice, engagement, cohesion, and welfare; and cultural vitality, represented by creativity, diversity, and innovation, and also by social well-being. Indeed, art and creativity as elements of expression play an important role in the social appropriation of the concept of sustainability, through the effective production of public campaigns [
14].
The vision of sustainability offered by Hakimi and Firoozabadi [
15] is interesting in terms of its way of looking forward to the generations to come: sustainable development is one of the issues that is currently given great importance and is identified by the United Nations as a key part of the 21st century agenda. Sustainable development refers to a kind of development that will meet today’s needs without reducing the ability of the future generations to meet theirs [
15].
2.2. The Meaning of Urban Space
Olalquiaga suggests that “history has been replaced by geography, stories by maps, memories by scenarios” [
16] (p. 19).
The geo-socio-political, economic, cultural, and technological scenario of the 21st century exhibits tensions between sustainable regional development models and less sustainable models. This process is producing a new scenario of transition, in which sustainability is understood as a fundamental element in the quest for new, responsible forms of production and consumption [
17]. Moreover, the concept of sustainable development appears to be associated, on the one hand, with democratic governance with a multidisciplinary perspective [
18], and on the other, with governance that promotes sustainability and social innovation [
19]. It also has the power to transform different types of regional vulnerabilities that are social [
20,
21], economic [
22], environmental [
20,
23], and institutional [
24,
25] in nature.
The technological advances seen since the early 1960s transcend social systems. With the creation of virtual worlds and the recent changes to the media model, technology has begun exceeding our wildest imaginings. However, technological and social advances sometimes result in increased pollution and waste generation. One example of this is outdoor advertising, which has polluting effects due to electricity consumption and the use of chemicals, paper, and PVC vinyl. This is why the introduction of sustainable outdoor advertising in urban spaces is so important [
26].
This forms part of the new scenario of sustainability in which symbolic technologies and creative cultures are redefining urban spaces as living laboratories of innovation and culture [
12]. All of this affects the urban landscape; creating, changing, or transforming places (the spaces of social contact) that have not yet lost their association with what they once represented and with specific contexts; places that are charged with meaning, generating and projecting content onto the environment (both people and landscape).
An interesting example that reflects the redefinition of urban space can be found in the influence of Tschumi’s writings on his design of the Parc de la Villette in Paris, as the architect himself acknowledges on his website [
7]:
“La Villette has become known as an unprecedented type of park, one based on “culture” rather than “nature.” The park is located on what was one of the last remaining large sites in Paris, a 125-acre expanse previously occupied by the central slaughterhouses and situated at the northeast corner of the city.”
Awareness and recognition of the area where people live enhances their identification with their neighbourhood, region, or city. When the inhabitants of an urban territory feel a greater sense of belonging to their community they can participate much more actively in the culture and the development of wealth (in every sense of the word) of the society in which they live [
27].
An urban space is not a product of chance; it is the reflection of what has been experienced there and a snapshot of reality with respect to societal trends. Following this idea, Lefebvre [
3] understood the urban landscape to go much further than merely a space or an expression. In this sense, the landscape can change social dynamics, which in turn can transform the space. According to Lefebvre, this makes the space both a product and a producer of society.
In contemporary cities, public spaces constitute one of the fundamental components of the social and the physical. Urban public spaces in the most general sense are considered public domain, and they have been designed and crafted as spaces for face-to-face relations, public experiences of the environment, human interaction with the urban fabric, and the collective public activities of its citizens [
28]. The British anthropologist Ingold considers that the transformation of spaces into places is a dynamic occurrence, suggesting that it happens as a result of practice, activity, and social participation [
29].
2.3. From Space to Place: Reflection in the Plastic Arts
To explore the relationships between architecture, urban space, and sustainability and their interaction in contemporary society, we turn to the plastic arts. This is another discipline for which sociology constitutes a critical conditioning factor, because in many cases the works grow out of the analysis, reflection, and interpretation of the environment.
For our analysis of artworks, we have adopted and extrapolated Riley & Riley’s model of communication [
30], in which the person responsible for the work acts as communicator, while the spectator acts as receiver, influencing and conditioning the other in a manner that is probably indirect, as the receiver acts as a social group or movement that is capable of changing the environment with its activity, which the artist will subsequently capture in his or her work.
The work of the American artist Ruscha [
31] explores the spaces that arise from the blending of capitalism and rationalism, and in his photographs, prints, and collages he is able to capture the boundaries between city, periphery, countryside, and the imaginary.
Pop art is a form that has been able to capture the aesthetic appeal of utilitarian structures and turn them into cult objects. Examples of this are Ruscha’s
Every Building on the Sunset Strip (1966) and
A Few Palm Trees (1971) [
32], both of which describe the architecture and atmosphere of Los Angeles. His work has influenced other artists like Graham, who published
Homes for America [
33], and who is interesting as well because he also uses architecture as artistic content.
Another significant example in this respect is without doubt the photographer Burtynsky, who reflects in his photographs on manufactured landscapes. His website [
34] features work he has completed on different human interventions in the landscape, including photographic projects titled
Anthropocene,
Mines,
Quarries,
Shipbreaking,
Homesteads,
Urban Mines, and
Railcuts.
The Anthropocene Project, an emblematic example of his work, constitutes [
34]:
“a multimedia exploration of the complex and indelible human signature on the Earth. Originally conceived as a photographic essay and the third in a trilogy of films including Manufactured Landscapes (2006) and Watermark (2013), the project quickly evolved to include film installations, large-scale Burtynsky high-resolution murals enhanced by film extensions, 360° VR short films, and augmented reality.”
Burtynsky’s work prompts us to stop and reflect on our own existence as human beings on Earth. It compels us to acknowledge that we urgently need to discover and maintain a balance between the resources we need from the environment and the health and viability of our planet.
Through the aesthetic neutrality with which he captures mundane architecture, Ruscha’s images effectively turn them into iconic objects, acting at once as signifier and signified. He repeats buildings, petrol stations and posters in series, and through this repetition he gives the photographs a narrative quality, resulting in an important reflection on American culture. His work has been featured in countless publications and museums, including the Reina Sofía in Madrid, the Center Pompidou in Paris, the Whitney in New York, and Tate Modern in London. All of these museums have featured partial exhibitions and retrospectives on Ruscha and have contributed even further, if possible, to the transformation of these spaces into places.
Another artist exemplifying the transformation of spaces into places through art—in this case, within one of the most interesting movements in the field of photography, the so-called ‘New Topographics’—is the American photographer Baltz (1945-2014). With his camera Baltz captured the action of man filling up the landscape with material content, and the effects of his actions from a distance. He does this by photographing residential, technological, and industrial spaces with no human presence. It is curious that these spaces are so close to us in chronological terms and yet at the same time we can observe in them the obsolescence of technology. In his work, Baltz takes an inventory of property speculation, deserted plots and factories, derelict spaces and the boundaries that exist between city and periphery. It is a stock-taking of excessive, unsustainable growth, the abandonment of previously occupied constructions. Baltz’s
The Tract Houses (1969–1971) [
35] is a reflection of all this, with its presentation of various single-family dwellings beside a highway.
Baltz often photographed unfinished or abandoned constructions. This is significant, because it reveals the human imprint on environments used by humans. His work bears a close relation to Ruscha’s pictures, because both artists did most of their work in the United States, and both reflect the American Dream in its before, after, and in-between phases. While Ruscha captures it with the ironic vision of pop art that turns icons into symbols, Baltz does it from a pessimistic perspective and with a critique that we can read on the surface of his work. Both artists’ works are charged with gravity because they show the consequences of a model that is unsustainable in terms of production, society, and the use of urban space. In Venezia-Marghera (2000–2013) (The work cited formed part of the retrospective put together by the Mapfre Foundation in Madrid, which ran from 9 February to 4 June 2017), Baltz shows us an industrialized neighbourhood near Venice that acts as the hindquarters to an environment overexploited by tourism. It is once again a critique of contemporary society and its consumption of spaces in the name of an unsustainable capitalism.
We consume the present without thought for the past or future. McLuhan argued that we can only see the effects of technology in retrospect, and our ignorance of its impact in the current moment is what is referred to as the “rear-view mirror effect” [
36] (p. 13). This idea of McLuhan’s offers us a different perspective for viewing the works of Baltz, Ruscha, or Burtynsky, which can be done mainly in two places: museums or publications. Neither of these are mass media channels, and both require interpretation and analysis on the part of the perceiver. They are what McLuhan calls “cool media”, because the spectator’s participation is essential for decoding the message conveyed by the artist. The images here have not been constructed in a linear order, as may be the case of radio, where the involvement of the listener’s senses is limited, and which McLuhan classifies as a “hot medium”. Hot media are consumed passively and leave much less of an impression because the perceiver has not had to develop skills to decode them.
Applying McLuhan’s reflections to our study, we could understand the possibility of creating in the present through an experience with the urban landscape that would allow us to give it a value that is much further away from the contemplative or the utilitarian. It could thus be effective to fill it with the idea of a symbol, perhaps a combination of cool and hot media through advertising on derelict urban structures.
The German photographers Bernd and Hilla Becher developed an interesting documentation project in both Europe and North America (furnaces, industrial towers, warehouses, lime kilns, etc.). Like Baltz, they avoided any human presence, and their documents appear to be as objective as possible; they rejected subjectivity through their academic use of the camera, controlling the exposure, saturation, framing, and composition [
37]. Without being aware of it, the Bechers were ultimately responsible for an aesthetic and for a movement of greater significance in contemporary photography: “deadpan photography”. Perhaps because of their family backgrounds, Bernd and Hilla were able to focus on taking pictures and highlighting derelict industrial spaces, which the couple described as “works without an author”. They were romantic about the industrial landscape, and about that which was doomed to disappear. Their journeys to document these places, which first began in the Ruhr, would criss-cross Germany, France, England, and Spain. Their first project,
Fachwerkhäuser, helped in many cases to preserve the architecture they documented, because they revealed the value of these constructions, always with an objective style, in photographs marked by clinical precision. The message conveyed seems to be created in a linear form, but the perceiver is inevitably compelled to reflect on the human intervention, the history of the space now occupied by these structures, the sustainability of such projects, or the void they have left behind.
In
The Modern Cult to Monuments [
38], the historian Riegl posits the existence of three different types of monuments: intentional monuments, where the creator seeks to preserve a past moment or a series of past moments; historical monuments, which also refer to a particular moment, but whose selection is dependent on the subjective taste of the perceiver; and finally, age-value monuments, which originate out of human choice, without considering their original purpose or function, and which by their nature are able to reveal the passage of time up to the current moment.
Of course, advertising often makes use of monuments to anchor a message, a context or a presentation, and it does so with all three categories of monuments proposed by Riegl. For example, ads for fragrances that show the Eiffel Tower evoke France and a long perfumery tradition. In this case, the advertising operates with a monument we already know and are able to locate in a given place, whether or not we have been there. The idea of making use of derelict architectural structures for advertising purposes operates on the other side of the subconscious, through discovery. The photographer White once said that “what a man finds is as creative as what a man does” [
37] (p. 15).
Within the city, advertising and the media act as referencing elements. Through their interventions they vest the city with recognizable, identifying features. Advertising has a cultural and symbolic function in the city. It facilitates the establishment of spaces of interest to tourists that become symbols and points of reference in post-modern cities [
39]. An example of this is Times Square in Manhattan, where the neon signs that completely cover the surrounding buildings serve as an immediately recognisable tourist attraction. In Spain, the Tío Pepe and Schweppes signs at Madrid’s Puerta del Sol have turned from advertising billboards into city landmarks with the protection of cultural organizations.
Architecture is viewed as an innovative tool that has contributed to social development, whereby architects of the modern movement like Le Corbusier, Mies, Aalto, or Charles and Ray Eames, among many others, have marked out a new way of consuming architecture. These architects understood that their discipline was a service to society, with a very powerful effect on improving the human environment, and they pursued this objective through standardization and the investigation of new materials and especially with an ethical approach. One of the maxims was that the building’s form follows its function and must always respond to the needs of the individual.
2.4. Utopias: A Creative Scenario
In advertising the key is to place the space in a concrete location, given that we understand social dynamics as occurring through an encounter. This is what is meant by ‘social spatiality’.
In his work, Constant brings together all these reflections and creates various graphic documents, conversations, scale models, publications and other materials related to New Babylon [
4]. His work is based on two essential premises: automation, and collective ownership of the land. Thanks to automation, the masses have much more free time to engage creatively and independently of the workplace; the mobility of each individual is thus increased exponentially, and the new model of space must respond to this need. Based on this idea, “
Homo Artisticus” [
40] will make art in order to bring about change, manipulating the existing space to meet the needs of playful activity and movement of “
Homo Ludens” [
41]. This will result in constant changes to the space through ephemeral architectural structures and temporary interventions. In the same architectural piece we can imagine a space left derelict by those who have gone, leaving knowledge and experiences of the physical space to those who come afterwards. Because even if the society has a nomadic character, spaces are static in terms of location.
The artificial environment built by the human being is the embryo, and Constant calls this ‘New Babylon’. Movement is needed, because remaining static produces assimilation and therefore limits or hinders our capacity to relate to other individuals. The modification of the space by the individual has consequences for society as a group, consequences that are not only architectural interventions but symbols of identity and belonging. Culture in New Babylon emerges through the global activity of the whole population rather than merely a restricted part of it; all human beings have a dynamic relationship with the environment which, as the sociologist Ingold suggests, transforms spaces into places.
In his outline of the social model, Constant locates the completely automated production superstructures far from the presence of man and the spaces of everyday life, and an extensive network of services provides everything needed for the comfort of the population [
4].
All of this serves to confirm that ideas about the need and ultimate aim of play have been appearing since the early 20th century. Interventions on derelict architecture need to be viewed in this way, as play; just as Constant foresaw, it is through the exercise of freedom and creative activity that humans learn, and that they vest the things they experiment on with value.
Advertising is also a provocation, because it changes the passive receiver into a perceiver, turning the message into a fluid that can penetrate and settle inside the individual. Mere intervention in a space by a brand, an entity, or a group represents the performance of a creative activity, and this is, in Constant’s words, the beginning of freedom.
2.5. Architecture as Symbol
In an interview included in the publication
Conversaciones con Alvar Aalto, the Finnish architect remarked that “the architect should consider more and more that he is responsible for the task of humanizing technology” [
42] (p. 18). Aalto (1898-1976) has left behind an immense legacy of organic architecture. His work is respectful of the environment, meditated, and measured, recognising that form is the result of function.
Although very different from the work of Constant [
4], given that his constructions have no tangible relation to utopia, in the 1950s Aalto made reference to a concept that represents a powerful connection between the two architects: their reflection on the importance of play, and the interaction and experimentation of play in architecture. He did this at a time when the modern movement had utterly abandoned all imaginative elements and was completely anchored in the rational dimensions of construction.
This idea that architecture needs to possess a responsibility for the environment (present in the work of both Aalto and Constant) has been taken up again by a group of Spanish architects in the project
Nación Rotonda, launched in mid-2013 [
43], which since that time has been documenting urban planning disasters, abandoned constructions, and public spaces of questionable taste. Various architects and engineers have joined the project, adding visual content to the publications on its website [
44]. Images captured by the Google Earth app allow us to compare different pictures of the same space taken a few years apart. This reflects how architecture is used as a symbol of development in many Spanish cities. Once we build something, there is no turning back; we have occupied the space, we have consumed resources and wasted the chance to use architecture as a democratic force, with the possibility of environmental sustainability. However, we can give spaces new uses, recover them through social dynamics, through encounters, contact, and play.
In the field of catalogue design, it is worth noting the graphic content created by the photographer Sardaña and the industrial designer Lanz, which they refer to as
“Racionalismo Levantino” [
6]. Although the buildings featured in their catalogue are not derelict, they are endangered due to the lack of awareness about them, and they are vulnerable to partial or total interventions that would rob them of their expressive form.
Sardaña and Lanz’s work presents different constructions on the Spanish Mediterranean Coast as symbols of this region of tourist beaches, focusing on different elements worthy of cataloguing and protection. They capture the motifs of the latticework and wall fixtures, the construction techniques, materials, stairway designs, and a long list of elements with a plasticity that allows us to reflect on the way we consume space. They also include several images of the work of architects like Guardiola and García-Solera, both important exponents of modern architecture in Spain. The project has been featured at various galleries and exhibition halls, such as Palacio Quintanar in Segovia, Casa Negra in Asturias, and the Parking Gallery in Alicante, as detailed on the project’s website.
To understand the factors that have led to this situation, it is instructive to examine the concept of “city branding” [
8], which we will explore in more detail in the next section. The objective of such branding is to vest territories with brand images, to fulfil the need to stand out in order to be commercially successful, which often tends to result in the elimination of the distinguishing features of each area where it is applied, in the interests of an architectural ‘backdrop’ that is often impersonal and unremarkable.
In opposition to city branding are notions like Constant’s model of a city in constant change, and far from utopian. It is a concept inherent in the urban landscape, because the city is in constant movement; conversely, the concept of city branding acts in the opposite direction, as it eliminates complexity in order to establish certain permanent features. The space loses its polysemy.
Another attempt to give architecture a symbolic dimension can be found in the work of Dot-Jutgla and Pallares-Barbera, who offer an exhaustive review of the literature on industrial heritage sites in the process of urban revitalization in the post-industrial city. On the one hand, they analyze the concept of industrial heritage, while also studying its transformation into new functions for the territory from different and interesting perspectives: for cultural purposes, tourism, housing, business, and amenities. On the other, they discuss the process of image creation and symbolism of the city as a political strategy of development and attraction based on its heritage resources [
45].
The conversion of urban architecture into a symbol has helped turn the city into a place designed not for its inhabitants, but for tourists keen to post another conquest to their social networks. Ingold reflects on a view of the city in terms of its individuals [
46], as citizens rather than consumers. When cities abuse this concept, phenomena like gentrification or loss of identity are the results. In this sense, the city is a document capable of faithfully reproducing what has happened in a given space, arising from the clash between the community and the physical space: the uses of the land, the function of the spaces, their technological development, their productive capacity, the interests of the population. The city is not merely the reflection of what the dominant classes decide to do with the space, but a testimony to the reaction of the subalterns to particular urban planning policies.
Collective action here should not be understood merely as the reclaiming of what has already been built, but as the movements and dynamics that emerge for the recovery and appropriation of these elements for use. The totality of architectural structures and the movements launched to highlight their value may constitute a source of both cultural and economic wealth.
2.6. City Marketing or City Branding: Some Examples in Spain
We will attempt a description of city branding specifically in terms of architecture and the media. The term actually covers various fields, from graphic design and gastronomy to music, because it refers to the image that effectively creates the city in the mind of those who think about it.
Cities tend towards polysemy, with a multitude of messages converging in a single place to enhance the power of the concept, so that visitors, or those who consider visiting, will find reasons to make the city their own.
According to Dot-Jutgla and Pallares-Barbera [
45], interventions in Spain’s urban architectural heritage are relatively recent, beginning around the year 2000. These authors offer the examples of the CaixaForum cultural centers in Madrid and Barcelona, whose buildings used to be a factory and an electrical power plant, respectively. Another is the Canal Isabel II Exhibition Hall in Madrid, which was formerly a water station.
A particularly notable case of an architectural intervention aimed at city branding can be found in Santiago de Compostela, (Spain). Of Roman origin, this ancient city has been a UNESCO World Heritage site since 1985. The cathedral is of Romanesque origin, although the best-known image of it is the façade that faces the Praza do Obradoiro, which offers an excellent example of Spanish Baroque. The city is a massive collection of samples of medieval, Gothic, and Baroque architecture.
In 1999, the regional government held an international public tender to provide the city with a construction that would reflect Galician progress, and that could serve as an icon to make Santiago a recognizable and memorable city.
The team of American architect Eisenman won the tender with their proposal to construct a six-building complex on Monte Gaia, two kilometres from the city center. In 2019, the work is as yet uncompleted, and there is no sign that it will be. In 2013, the Galician parliament determined not to invest any more money in its construction, given that up to that time, although more than half of the complex had yet to be built, the project had already gone three times over its original budget; this may have had something to do with the use of quartzite rock imported from South America, as reported in the local newspaper
Voz de Galicia [
47], despite the fact that Galicia itself is one of Europe’s biggest producers of this type of rock.
The local architect Llano commented [
47]:
“The scale model was a marvel […] an Opera House was designed with three elevators on the stage, with the capacity to stage three operas on the same day, as if it were the Lincoln Center. In New York you can keep the opera season going all year round. But in Europe—in Milan and Venice, for example—it can’t be done. And yet we here, with a population of just over 90,000, could afford a theatre like that […]”.
This cultural center is a space that now costs Galicians more than 4.5 million euros a year in maintenance, with limited transport services and a highly questionable layout that is still missing its main buildings.
A rather more shining example of this kind of city branding (if only for the effect of the sunlight on the titanium plates that cover its façade) is the Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, a building that serves as an emblem of one of the most controversial movements in architecture: deconstructivism, of which its architect, Gehry, is a faithful adherent. In keeping with our approach to the previous example, we will not engage in an appraisal of architectural aspects, but instead we will focus on numerical questions: although it had a cost of 133 million euros, which in the 1990s represented a major challenge for the local government (which covered the full cost of the construction), today the museum has a major impact on the regional economy. In 2017 alone, it brought in more than 453 million euros, with a total of 1.16 million visitors that year, according to the digital edition of the newspaper
El Independiente [
48]. The museum’s collection includes works by international artists like Hockney, Holzer, Warhol, and Picasso.
The point is that, until its construction, industry represented 25% of Bilbao’s GDP, and the objective was not only to provide the city with a symbol but also to create a project that would revitalize its economy, as it evolved from an industrial center into a cultural center.
An even more successful example was the construction of the Igualada Cemetery in Barcelona, which was designed by the architects Miralles and Pinós and constructed on an old quarry. For Miralles, direct and personal observation is the seed out of which any project needs to grow: “to listen to users and understand their new needs”. To this end, the architect uses personal notes, different points of view, and explorations of the exterior to establish a dialogue with the place, its people, the local customs and the way of life, with maps, with history and with memory. The landscape and the architecture converge naturally in this work to become one. Miralles shows us a type of organic architecture that can adapt and age with the landscape, integrating and mutually enhancing the two [
49].
A case that has contributed to Barcelona’s branding and image—specifically, the recovery of the city’s industrial heritage in the Poble Nou district—is examined by Dot-Jutgla and Pallares-Barbera [
45]. The authors adopt different perspectives to analyze the conversion of the industrial buildings in this neighbourhood into residential complexes, cultural centers or tourist attractions [
45]. They also analyze the interrelations between these initiatives of the city’s local government and the marketing programs to promote an urban image aimed at attracting international capital (through tourism, corporate investment, etc.).
At this point, it is worth considering the reflection on sustainable urban development offered by Hakimi and Firoozabadi [
15]:
“The concept of sustainable urban development is also the result of the environmentalist debate about environmental issues, especially the urban environment, which was provided after the proposal of sustainable development theory to support environmental resources. The level of urban sustainability shows the quality of life in cities”.