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4 - Urban Planning, Public Interest, and SpatialJustice: A Case Study of the Lo-Sheng SanatoriumPreservation Movement in Taipei

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 November 2022

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Summary

Abstract

Using the Lo-Sheng Sanatorium PreservationMovement as a case study, this chapter examinesseveral substantial problems in urban planningtheories, including the multiplicity of publicinterests, the necessity of framing publicinterest from the perspective of spatial justice,and the changing relationship between the stateand civil society in the planning process. Byexploring various urban discourses proposed by aplurality of groups concerning the Lo-Shengheritage site, I argue that the Lo-ShengPreservation Movement demonstrates how heritageactivism can reshape public interest and changethe state's relationship with civil society. Assuch, the movement was an invaluable milestone inthe emergence of civic urbanism in Taipei.

Keywords: Heritage preservation,public sphere, urban social movement, planningtheory, Hansen's disease

‘Can You Afford It?’

This chapter is inspired by the Lo-ShengSanatorium(樂生療養院) (hereafter referred to asLo-Sheng) Preservation Movement in Taipei. Lo-Shengwas a facility established in the 1930s to housepatients suffering from Hansen's disease (what usedto be called leprosy), and it is located in what isnow the Xinzhuang District of New Taipei City,Taiwan. The sanatorium was constructed by theJapanese colonial government to isolate leprosypatients from the general public. In 2002, a seriesof preservation actions took place when plans wereannounced to locate the depot of the Taipei MassRapid Transport (MRT) Xinzhuang Line at the site ofthe sanatorium. In April 2002, two months before theconstruction began, the Lo-Sheng Alliance for OldTree Protection in Xinzhuang was established bygroups including the Xinzhuang Community College,Xinzhuang Culture and History Association, andLo-Sheng residents. This alliance successfullyadvocated for saving many old trees on the site andraised awareness of Lo-Sheng's cultural value forXinzhuang residents, the media, and other civilsociety groups. Then, in 2004, Youth for Lo-Sheng(青年樂生聯盟)was established by students mainly from theNational Yang- Ming University, Chang GungUniversity, and Kaohsiung Medical University, topreserve all the buildings and outdoor spaces onsite. However, public authorities – including theTaipei City Government's Department of Rapid TransitSystems (DRTS), which led the construction, and theDepartment of Cultural Affairs of Taipei County (nowNew Taipei City), which oversaw cultural affairs –denied the groups’ petition, claiming that thepreservation efforts would delay the construction ofinfrastructure critical for the country.

Type
Chapter
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Emerging Civic Urbanisms in Asia
Hong Kong, Seoul, Singapore, and Taipei beyondDevelopmental Urbanization
, pp. 95 - 118
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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