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Putting the working class in their place Redevelopment and territory in the new Belfast

Contents. Initial thoughts and questions for a new research project:Northern Ireland since the 1998 Good Friday/ Belfast Agreement Two paradigms - the ?old' and the ?new' Northern IrelandNeoliberalism and Northern IrelandTwo Belfast case studies: Crumlin Road Gaol/ Girdwood Barracks and Titanic

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Putting the working class in their place Redevelopment and territory in the new Belfast

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    1. Putting the working class in their place? Redevelopment and territory in the new Belfast Jenny Muir Housing Studies Association conference Cardiff 15th - 17th April

    2. Contents Initial thoughts and questions for a new research project: Northern Ireland since the 1998 Good Friday/ Belfast Agreement Two paradigms - the ‘old’ and the ‘new’ Northern Ireland Neoliberalism and Northern Ireland Two Belfast case studies: Crumlin Road Gaol/ Girdwood Barracks and Titanic Quarter Observations from the case studies Conclusions

    3. Northern Ireland since the 1998 Good Friday/ Belfast Agreement (1) Governance: GFA - Power-sharing Assembly, four main parties in government GFA - Provision for all-Ireland referendum on reunification GFA - North – South Ministerial Council; British – Irish Council; locks NI into wider institutional relationships Assembly suspended October 2002 – May 2007 BUT devolved structures continued under ‘Direct Rule’ Ministers St Andrews Agreement (2006): Support for policing and the courts from all parties; Executive responsibility Assembly restored May 2007 with DUP/ Sinn Féin main parties Review of Public Administration: Councils will be reduced from 26 to 11; health, education & library service bodies being rationalised; housing affected marginally; community planning for councils

    4. Northern Ireland since the 1998 Good Friday/ Belfast Agreement (2) Economic issues: GDP p.c. increases:1.8% in 1998; 3.0% 2007; predicted -1.5% 2009 (UK overall predicted -3.0%) Unemployment: 8.1% in 1998; 3.8% 2007; Nov 2008 – Jan 2009: 5.7% (UK average 6.5%) Costs of segregation have been up to £1.5bn Reinvestment & Reform Initiative (PFI for infrastructure); Rates revaluation; attempt to introduce water rates (now omitted from Barnett Formula) Social issues: Residential segregation and separate education still widespread Residual conflict in ‘interface’ areas Poverty higher than rest of UK Fringe paramilitary activity still evident

    5. Northern Ireland: two paradigms

    6. 2008 Programme for Government: illustration of priorities

    7. Is Northern Ireland becoming more neoliberal? Characteristics of neoliberalism: Deregulation of economic transactions Private finance, privatisation Commodification and primacy of market mechanisms Use of market proxies in the state sector International policy transfer State intervention ‘rolled back’ to focus on support for capital ‘Rolling out’ new forms of governance and social control Welfare costs transferred to the individual and to ‘communities’ The ‘new’ NI paradigm: More of 2,3,5,6,7,8 – but also directly elected regional Assembly A different neoliberalism? Convergence with rest of UK?

    8. Case study 1: Crumlin Road Gaol/ Girdwood Barracks site

    9. Crumlin Girdwood timeline 1996: Crumlin Road Gaol closed 2001: Belfast Regeneration Office economic appraisal - gaol site only 2002: Dunlop Report in response to Holy Cross events: Proposal for a ‘large scale physical regeneration project… any potential development should be created and maintained as neutral space’ (p.83) Wider feasibility study proposed, but not including the Barracks North Belfast Community Action Unit established 2003: Gaol ownership transferred to OFMDFM as part of Reinvestment and Reform Initiative (PFI); 2005 feasibility study 2005: Barracks closure announced and site acquired by DSD 2006 2006: (Direct Rule) Ministerial Advice Panel established; consultation 2007: draft Masterplan – consultation continues, no agreement on housing; Gaol refurbishment proceeding separately 2008: Residents’ Jury held by Participation and Practice of Rights Project

    10. Crumlin/ Girdwood summary 27 acre site New shared ‘heartspace’ in the centre of the site (community hub) Leisure facilities Gaol site: refurbishment, museum, hotel – tourism link to privately owned Courthouse New facilities for local hospital and school New access road (contentious) Mixed tenure housing (contentious) 3 other major development sites Cost £231m; add £68m if no housing for sale in phase 1

    11. Crumlin Girdwood issues Draft Masterplan 2007 – no progress early 2009 except Gaol refurbishment, supported by all Redevelopment is in the most deprived and divided part of Belfast but needs to attract private investment Site is owned by two government departments and the nearby Courthouse by a private developer - school and hospital redevelopments funded and planned separately No agreement on housing – Protestants want none; Catholics want social housing; draft Masterplan suggests mixed tenure housing Mixed tenure housing seen as proxy for ‘mixed’ housing – impractical given the area Access road potential to create new interface

    12. Case study 2: Titanic Quarter

    13. Titanic Quarter location (2)

    14. Titanic Quarter timeline 1990: Site development potential first identified 2000: Odyssey Arena opened – Millennium Project 2000: Site renamed Titanic Quarter 2001: Work starts on site preparation and Masterplan 2002: Lease signed for Science Park 2003: Outline planning application submitted for Phase 1 2005: Site lease bought by Harcourt Developments from Fred Olsen shipping co. – freehold owned by Belfast Harbour Commissioners 2005: Masterplan and Development Framework issued 2006: Planning permission granted for phase 1 residential and office 2007: Construction begins on phase 1; outline permission granted for phase 2 which includes social housing 2009: Construction begins on Signature Project

    15. Titanic Quarter summary Phase 1: 475 apartments & marina Gateway office building Belfast Metropolitan College New Public Records Office Phase 2 (outline): Titanic Signature project (for 2012 anniversary) Approx. 2000 apartments including 15% social/ affordable housing Leisure & industrial park Small-scale retail Hotel Private funding and public agency investment

    16. Titanic Quarter issues Credit crunch and economic crisis: Fall in value of Phase 1 flats bought off plan Finding office tenants Cash flow (Part) Solution: public investment brought forward – Signature Project, Public Records office, college Community links: Previously industrial site – no ‘community’ to consult Links with East Belfast Partnership and Belfast Titanic Society Social housing: Will raise question of territory – TQ prefer LCHO

    17. Observations from the case studies (Re)Presenting and commodifying history as key part of each development, with public support Territorial issues: Crumlin/ Girdwood – is ‘shared space’ realistic in such a divided area? – perhaps yes without housing, but there is housing need Titanic Quarter – shared space taken for granted Shared space may be gained at the expense of excluding those who need social housing Role of public sector more substantial than plans suggest: Crumlin/ Girdwood: PFI for gaol redevelopment; hospital, school TQ: Signature project, college (PFI), Public Records Office

    18. Conclusions Northern Ireland has changed considerably since the 1998 Good Friday Agreement Some aspects of the ‘new’ Northern Ireland have public support e.g. policing - but there is no new hegemonic direction overall and the NI Assembly has been slow to respond to the economic downturn Urban regeneration case studies are appropriate to examine this phenomenon because they are: Complex urban environments undergoing rapid change Often with dedicated governance structures Usually with high level of community involvement It appears likely that the new paradigm will create new territorial divisions by class, to add to continuing working class sectarian divisions

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