Variations of the entrepreneurial city: Goals, roles visions in Rotterdam’s Kop van Zuid and the Glasgow Harbour megaprojects
Publication date
2013
Authors
Doucet, B.M.
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Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013
Abstract
Both Rotterdam’s Kop van Zuid and the Glasgow Harbour waterfront developments are
examples of different forms of European urban entrepreneurial megaprojects. They are
both situated on formerly vacant land in older industrial cities. In Rotterdam, the
municipality has taken the initiative in planning and developing the megaproject, while
in Glasgow, this task has been left to the private sector, with the City functioning as a
facilitator. While urban entrepreneurialism and megaprojects have been discussed in
academic literature for almost three decades, there are too few case studies which delve
into the specific visions guiding these projects, the goals which they are meant to achieve
and the positions which different actors play. The aim of this article is to analyze the
relationship between these visions, goals and positions of actors in megaprojects and
whether these relationships can explain how the different outcomes are produced. What
we see is that in municipally-led projects, entrepreneurial goals are more easily formed
and implemented than when the public sector acts only as a facilitator to private
developers. It will also argue that it is not only structural contexts which are important
in determining the types of megaprojects which get built and the success which they
achieve, but also the specific values, visions and goals that different stakeholders have.