When condominiums first emerged in North American cities in the 1960s,
they were a new kind of housing governed by boards of resident owners
volunteering in a community. Condo Conquest shows how the condo and
its inner governance have since become something else entirely, taken
over – or conquered – by an assemblage of firms specializing in
condo law, real estate, security, and property management, as well as
growing numbers of non-resident investors who purchase condo units as
commodities. Drawing on the accounts of residents and board directors
in Toronto and New York and myriad other sources, Randy Lippert takes
a closer look at the inner workings of condoization. Condo governance
is revealed to increasingly involve a complex set of legal, social,
and spatial relationships among various elements assembled together,
including commercial agents, forms of knowledge, and technologies,
with some troubling consequences for resident owners, renters, and
urban life. A growing reliance on commodified technologies and
emergent forms of knowledge – including surveillance systems and
detailed information about property values, aesthetics, crime and
other risks, and legal decisions and statutes – also threaten the
condo’s future and its promise of community. The first major study
of condominium governance in North America, Condo Conquest questions
assumptions about the condo and its governance and considers its
future. By illuminating the complex set of agents, processes, and
forms of knowledge that have taken over the condo world, Lippert
discerns a number of troubling trends that are not only threatening
the condo’s future but also eroding the power of municipal
governments and undermining the integrity of urban communities.
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Urban Governance, Law, and Condoization in New York City and Toronto
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780774860376
Publisert
2021
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
University of British Columbia Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter