TY - JOUR
T1 - Mapping waterfront (re)developments in Southeast Asia
T2 - Speculation, entrepreneurial urbanism, and blue gentrification
AU - Avni, Nufar
AU - Moser, Sarah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors.
PY - 2026/3
Y1 - 2026/3
N2 - Waterfront (re)development projects have been prioritized by city officials around the world over the past several decades as a variety of public and private stakeholders increasingly compete for valuable coastal land. While academic research on waterfront redevelopments has expanded dramatically and examines the different motivations, types, stakeholders, and outcomes of these projects globally, English-language scholarship largely focuses on contexts in Europe and the anglosphere, with some attention paid to projects in China, Singapore, and a handful of other Global South cities. Despite the prominent coastal features of Southeast Asia and its fast pace of development, only limited scholarly attention has been paid to waterfront redevelopments in the region. In this paper, we identify waterfront developments launched over the past 15 years in 11 Southeast Asian countries. We point out several important trends in Southeast Asian waterfront developments fueled by massive waves of investment, including the increasing foreignization of urban space, which has resulted in speculative and entrepreneurial urbanism and blue gentrification, massive land reclamation, and limited public benefit. These patterns underscore the urgency of expanding urban research to account for the distinctive dynamics and implications of coastal urban transformation in Southeast Asia—not only in socio-economic and geopolitical terms, but also in light of the extreme ecological sensitivity of these coastal zones.
AB - Waterfront (re)development projects have been prioritized by city officials around the world over the past several decades as a variety of public and private stakeholders increasingly compete for valuable coastal land. While academic research on waterfront redevelopments has expanded dramatically and examines the different motivations, types, stakeholders, and outcomes of these projects globally, English-language scholarship largely focuses on contexts in Europe and the anglosphere, with some attention paid to projects in China, Singapore, and a handful of other Global South cities. Despite the prominent coastal features of Southeast Asia and its fast pace of development, only limited scholarly attention has been paid to waterfront redevelopments in the region. In this paper, we identify waterfront developments launched over the past 15 years in 11 Southeast Asian countries. We point out several important trends in Southeast Asian waterfront developments fueled by massive waves of investment, including the increasing foreignization of urban space, which has resulted in speculative and entrepreneurial urbanism and blue gentrification, massive land reclamation, and limited public benefit. These patterns underscore the urgency of expanding urban research to account for the distinctive dynamics and implications of coastal urban transformation in Southeast Asia—not only in socio-economic and geopolitical terms, but also in light of the extreme ecological sensitivity of these coastal zones.
KW - Blue gentrification
KW - Foreignization
KW - Land reclamation
KW - Southeast Asia
KW - Speculative urbanism
KW - Waterfront redevelopments
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105024608629
U2 - 10.1016/j.cities.2025.106714
DO - 10.1016/j.cities.2025.106714
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AN - SCOPUS:105024608629
SN - 0264-2751
VL - 170
JO - Cities
JF - Cities
M1 - 106714
ER -