Abstract
Auckland's post-suburban landscape is associated with new mixed-use apartment developments. When located in former industrial sites, these emergent residential and retail spaces constitute new-build gentrification and carry the potential to rupture existing people/place dynamics. This article examines material and socio-cultural processes associated with the redevelopment of an industrial quarry in Three Kings, Auckland. It is argued that the redevelopment constitutes a physical refashioning of a former industrial space located within a traditional working-class community. The development involves a remaking of the material and socio-cultural fabric of the neighbourhood and aligns with new-build gentrification practices.
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Naismith, L., & Murphy, L. (2023). Refashioning place and new-build gentrification: The material and symbolic redevelopment of Three Kings, Auckland. New Zealand Geographer, 79(1), 3–14. https://doi.org/10.1111/nzg.12349
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