Global cities have been characterized as networked nodes, with multiple and intensive global flows of people, goods, services, ideas, and images. These often share more in common, and identify more with other such cities than with urban hinterlands in their own countries. Given the myriad external linkages and orientation, this paper will argue that some Asian cities progress is not only aimed at economic and social emancipation, which are only tools to attain global city status. It will particularly examine the cultural production of new urban spaces due to economic growth, and compare between two Asian cities of Hong Kong and Singapore.

Economy, Environment, Culture: Global Dreams by Two Asian Cities

Type
journal article
Year
2010
Global cities have been characterized as networked nodes, with multiple and intensive global flows of people, goods, services, ideas, and images. These often share more in common, and identify more with other such cities than with urban hinterlands in their own countries. Given the myriad external linkages and orientation, this paper will argue that some Asian cities progress is not only aimed at economic and social emancipation, which are only tools to attain global city status. It will particularly examine the cultural production of new urban spaces due to economic growth, and compare between two Asian cities of Hong Kong and Singapore.

Citation

Rahman, Mahbubur. "Economy, Environment, Culture: Global Dreams by Two Asian Cities," in ArchNet-IJAR: International Journal of Architectural Research, vol. 4, issue 1 (2010).

Parent Publications

Copyright

Mahbubur Rahman

Terms of Use

CC BY-NC-ND

Country

Singapore
Hong Kong

Language

English

Keywords