sexta-feira, 4 de setembro de 2015

Is Lisbon the next Berlin?

O tom triunfante deste artigo esconde a ambivalência, ou até, a ambiguidade perversa dos efeitos da gentrificação e respectiva espiral especulativa e inflacionadora, que cidades como Barcelona, Berlim, Londres, etc., estão a conhecer.
O VOODOCORVO oferece uma série de artigos para reflexão …
Em Lisboa, os poucos que “ficaram” e que tiveram a possibilidade de ocupar o centro histórico, sào agora perseguidos sistemáticamente por empreendedores, imobilárias ou agentes de aposentados estrangeiros que usufruem de isenções fiscais, que lhes oferecem quantias irrecusáveis …
Esta espiral vai tranformar todo o centro histórico numa área cada vez mais ocupada por não Lisboetas … e inflacionar os preços a um nível proibitivo, num processo irreversível.
OVOODOCORVO.

PROPERTY I 28.08.15 I BY TRISH LORENZ

Is Lisbon the next Berlin?
Affordable rent, low-cost living and a growing startup scene are attracting young creatives to the Portuguese capital


Lisbon-Streetscape. Photography: Sammy Arnold
Photography: Sammy Arnold

At first glance, Lisbon, with its 270 days of sunshine a year, laid-back Latin approach to timekeeping and a lifestyle based around the sea, doesn’t have much in common with northern European counterpart. But, thanks to an influx of young creatives attracted by the city’s affordable rents, thriving café and bar culture and an increasingly bohemian lifestyle, many commentators are beginning to brand Lisbon as ‘the new Berlin’.

Lisbon has long been a picturesque and affordable city but it’s only in the last seven years that it’s started to move away from its conservative roots and deliver a more Berlin-style vibe. This change is one of the few positive elements to result from the country’s on-going financial crisis: as job opportunities plummeted after 2008, many of the country’s young graduates found they had no option but to try their own thing.


Lisbon's public transport network is both cheap and efficient, covering trams, buses and a metro system. A 24 hour pass costs €5, but some central areas – Alfama, Baixa and Bairro Alto – are pedestrian only.

Lisbon’s public transport network is both cheap and efficient, covering trams, buses and a metro system. A 24 hour pass costs €5, but some central areas – Alfama, Baixa and Bairro Alto – are pedestrian only. Photography: Pom2

A vibrant entrepreneurial culture has emerged with everything from small design ateliers to new bars, restaurants and shops opening in the city. The Portuguese government has also introduced tax incentives to attract foreign entrepreneurs, and according to Lloyd Hughes, head of communication at London-based property specialists Athena Advisor: ‘The startup scene in the city is explosive.’

‘Especially over the last 12 months, we’ve seen a wave of ambitious young people who are part of the startup scene coming to Lisbon,’ says Hughes.


A Vida Portuguesa is a design-led store that opened in 2007 in the Chiado area of the city. An emporium of old fashioned Portuguese goods, from sardines to Claus Porto soaps, it is curated by its founder, journalist-turned-entrepreneur Catarina Portas.

Like Berlin, Lisbon’s entrepreneurial spirit has been facilitated by a surplus of empty buildings – some beautiful, others just run down – that are available at low prices. Young creative types tend to cluster in one of three areas.

In the centre of Lisbon, it’s the Santos area and particularly two streets: Rua Poço dos Negros and Rua Boa Vista. A formerly run-down district, Santos been reborn in part thanks to Rés do Chão, a not-for profit organisation that works to revitalise abandoned ground floor spaces. The organisation has leased a number of formerly abandoned stores to young fashion designers, product designers, architects, graphic designers and others.

For those who don’t need a whole atelier, co-working space Oficina Colectiva has recently opened on Poço dos Negros. Designers can take a desk and access a shared retail space for €170/month.

Other co-working spaces are cropping up around the city, taking over disused retail spaces. Pictured is Oficina Colectiva, which recently opened on Poço dos Negros in Santos.


Co-working space Oficina Colectiva

Some 15 minutes further west of the centre is Alcántara. Spread along the river, it was once a dockside suburb but today its empty warehouses are being used by musicians, film makers, advertising agencies and web developers who are reinventing the area, Berlin-style, as a creative hub.

Among the largest is LX Factory, home to studios, bars, restaurants, galleries and stores. A desk in a co-working space here costs from €150/month. Also in Alcántara is Village Underground Lisboa with offices, a bar and a gallery all housed in shipping containers, where a co-working desk similarly costs €150/month.


The LX Factory in Alcántara

To the east of the city in Xabregas and Braço de Prata, the landscape is more industrial but here, too, you’ll find studios, galleries and art venues. Fabrica Braço de Prata is typical. Formerly an abandoned factory, it was taken over as an artistic squat before being legalised some three years ago. Today it’s one of the city’s hippest music and art venues.

It’s very possible to find an affordable apartment in Lisbon. According to Hughes, Lisbon prices are still ‘extremely low’. To buy here costs around €2,000/metre compared to London’s €25,000/metre averages and Hughes says young buyers are favouring central Lisbon districts like Chiado, Alfama and Mouraria.


Village Underground Lisboa. Photography: André Nogueira

Village Underground Lisboa is a co-working and events space made from shipping containers and repurposed double-decker buses. It is one of the city’s newest culture hubs – it opened in May 2014 and is close to LX Factory – and is the sister venue of the Shoreditch club. Photography: André Nogueira

Rental prices are also affordable. In Xabregas and Braço de Prata you can pay as little as €150 per month for a two bed apartment. In the centre of Lisbon and Alcántara a large room in a shared apartment will cost around €250 to €300 and a one bed apartment from €350 upwards.


Some of Lisbon’s traditional kiosks – many of which closed in the last few decades or fell into disrepair – are currently being restored, giving fresh energy to the city’s public squares. Photography: Catarina Portas


There’s more to life than work and in Lisbon it’s affordable to have fun, too. An espresso is 65 cents, you can buy a small beer for €1 and spend less than €5 on a steak and chips lunch. Day and evening, the bars, restaurants and cafes across the city are buzzing and however you look at it, Berlin, it seems, has some serious competition for the title of Europe’s coolest city.

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