When Urban Planning Gets Political: The History of Taksim Square

Over the last two weeks, the world has witnessed history unfold in a small park in the heart of Istanbul, Taksim Square. What started out as a peaceful protest to save Gezi Park and its trees from destruction has turned into a country-wide (and, to some degree, worldwide) movement that rejects the ever-increasing autocratic tendencies of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The urban policies and projects that PM Erdogan and his government have been loutishly implementing in Istanbul offer only a few examples of the way this government has manifested its undemocratic attitudes. In that regard, it would be misleading to consider the protest over Taksim and Gezi Park as an isolated incident. Instead, development over Istanbul’s quintessential square constitutes the last straw in a series of neo-liberal policies, themselves the result of a century of history, that have shaped Istanbul over the course of the last decade.

More after the break...

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Cite: Onur Ekmekci. "When Urban Planning Gets Political: The History of Taksim Square" 14 Jun 2013. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/388271/when-urban-planning-gets-political-the-history-of-taksim-square> ISSN 0719-8884

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