6533b824fe1ef96bd12816cd

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Gated Housing Estates in the Arab World: Case Studies in Lebanon and Riyadh, Saudi Arabia

Georg GlaszeAbdallah Alkhayyal

subject

05 social sciencesGeography Planning and Development0211 other engineering and technologies0507 social and economic geographyExtended family021107 urban & regional planning02 engineering and technologyPrivate sectorUrban researchSocial groupPoliticsGeographyEconomyEnvironmental protectionOld townSettlement (litigation)Seclusion050703 geographyGeneral Environmental Science

description

The authors analyze the cultural, economic, and political background of new gated housing estates in the Arab world with the aid of case studies in Lebanon and Riyadh. Their question is to what extent these developments represent a reappearance of the fragmented settlement patterns in many of the old towns. On the one hand, new compounds of several villas and common facilities housing extended families in Riyadh may be interpreted as a revival of certain sociospatial settings in the old town, in which extended families often shared a common courtyard. The compounds for Western foreigners in Saudi Arabia follow the principle of spatial seclusion of social groups with different cultural and religious backgrounds-a principle of the sociospatial organization of many old towns in the Arab world. The emergence of gated housing estates in Lebanon, on the other hand, has obvious and specific sociopolitical origins in the 20th century. The failure of public regimentation and provision created a gap, which was partially filled by the private sector. For their mostly wealthy clientele, gated housing estates offer private small-scale solutions to nationwide problems. 1 Gated housing estates in the Arab world: a reappearance of traditional housing patterns? In the cities of the Arab world the spatial seclusion of social groups is not a new phenomenon. Urban research on premodern towns depicted the sociospatial and

https://doi.org/10.1068/b12825t