Monopoly

The Monopoly game shows us that for over a century, the economic system behind land ownership has remained more or less the same in the western world. Each time we lose a monopoly game we realize how difficult it is to become an important player when you have only few properties in town, except when you´re extremely lucky on the dice. Each time we win, we understand how it really works well to be a monopolist –  of any kind in any place, be it in real estate, the fast food industry, nightlife, in New York, São Paulo or Manchester. Money you invest in land will bring you more money, while those who rent pay the bill. During economic crises however, these rules are turned upside-down.

Monopoly was based on the Landlord´s Game, a board game made in 1904 by Elizabeth Magie. She built the game according to the principles of Henry George, who stated that in essence all wealth comes from land ownership and that this should therefore be the main source of tax revenues in a fair society. Magie used the game to demonstrate how rents enrich property owners and impoverish tenants. The consciousness of  this ongoing injustice would eventually encourage citizens to change the economic system, she thought. In the following hundred years, the Monopoly game has dominated the world, apparently without provoking such effects. In 1935 she sells the game patent to the Parker brothers. Shortly after the financial crisis of 1929, the emblematic game became an instant commercial success. Similar games were developed at the same time, such as Finance, in 1932.

The well-known game board of New York still featured places like the Boardwalk, which would become abandoned realty failures only a few decades later. Newer game boards feature boom-towns like Hollywood and Las Vegas. Shortly after the oil crisis in the seventies, an Anti-Monopoly game was brought out by professor Ralph Anspach (San Fransisco University). In this game, the initial situation was in fact a monopoly, whereas the players had to try and return to a free market situation during the game. Numerous other -opoly games were made throughout the years, including Ghettopoly, a version dealing with Harlem and other delicate neighborhoods, which was considered shocking and racist. Recently, a Monopoly Recession Edition was launched, describing the collapsed real estate market of 2009, marked by foreclosures and bankruptcies. Fast Food Franchise is about becoming a snack food tycoon, while Rua Augusta monopolizes bars and night clubs in a popular leisure area of São Paulo. After urban space, the game format has recently been used to play competition and domination in cyberspace, for example in Googolopoly and Blogpoly.

Sphinx

In 2004, the city of Maastricht approved the Belvédère master plan, concerning the grand scale redevelopment of an old industrial area, at the fringe of the old city center. The site is characterized by the old Sphinx factory (porcelain and ceramic products), as well as the central dock, where ships used to unload raw materials and load manufactured goods. Sphinx was founded in Maastricht in 1834 and its new owner, a Finnish businessman, ended activities in Maastricht in 2010.
The industrial complex intersects with two main urban structures of 19th century Maastricht: the military defense walls, surrounding the city, and the Willemsvaart, a major transport canal for importing and exporting goods. In the remaining buildings, several innovative building techniques of the industrial age were incorporated in an early stage, such as the reinforced concrete structure of Hennebique and one of the first glass curtain walls.

The master plan affirms Maastricht as a compact city in an open landscape. This means the Belvédère site is one of the last areas for large scale urban projects. The transformation will take between 20 and 25 years and will cost around 1,3 billion euros. The municipality has signed a joint venture for the investments with ING Real Estate and BPF, among smaller corporations. In the plan, there is a focus on new dwellings, offices and cultural program. In the light of the current European real estate crisis, these ambitions are likely to be altered or delayed.

One of the icons in the industrial site is the Carpenter’s Workshop. The transformation of this old structure to give it an important cultural function is supposed to boost the cultural infrastructure of Maastricht. The complex shelters a cultural movie theater, studios for practice purposes and a performance theater for the Huis van Bourgondië, a workshop for music production house Intro-In Situ, a practice space for Toneelgroep Maastricht, a cultural café, a restaurant, lobbies and office space, space for urban music and events, a theater room with 400 chairs, artist lobby and technical space, and a bicycle garage.

Read more:
Report on the historic value of the Sphinx complex (Dutch)
Discover the Sphinx area Maastricht and its main buildings in Google Maps

Soho – Hong Kong

Soho, near the central district of Hong Kong Island,  is a dynamic urban area full of restaurants, shops and nightlife. The traditional hill-side neighborhood stretches more or less from the lower Queens Road Central until Robinson Road at the top, having the busy Hollywood Road in the mid level.
In the early nineties the Central-Mid-Levels Escalator System was built, able to move people up-hill over 800 meter distance and 135 meter level. The system has entrances at most streets. In the morning it descends, to help people in the neigborhood get to work quicker; at night it ascends, to get inhabitants back home and to bring people up to the bars and restaurants.


View of the Central-Mid-Levels Escalator

This easy access has triggered a rapid gentrification and increasing mixed use of the area. The direct surroundings of the escalator are completely dominated by tourist restaurants and fast food chains. Neighboring streets are steadily being occupied by luxurious apartments for expats and fancy art galleries. In some of the streets an interesting mix can be seen between new art galleries and traditional Hong Kong craftsmen workshops, but due to the ground prices this unique situation is unlikely to last long.


Art gallery and vintage shop in Soho


Wall graffiti in Soho

Explore Soho Hong Kong and the escalator system in Google Maps

Helsinki industrial heritage

Helsinki has preserved many of its former industrial structures along the city´s waterfront. A nice concentration of these historic buildings can be found at the peninsula Katajanokka. Despite the inhospitable climate, the author went into town and photographed some examples.

Check out the building locations at Google Maps

Gräsviksgatan building

Katajanokka school building

Kino K13

Vanha Kauppahalli

Hietalahden Kauppahalli