Underground Dreams and Degradations in Bucharest

Underground Dreams and Degradations in Bucharest by Bruce O’Neill, published by University of Pennsylvania Press in 2024, explores the complexities of urban life beneath Romania’s capital. This 272-page book delves into how global economic demands have transformed Bucharest’s underground spaces, including Metro stations, pedestrian pathways, and various subterranean structures, to accommodate the aspirations of its middle-class residents in an increasingly crowded city.
Readers will find a thorough examination of the social and economic dynamics at play as O’Neill discusses the implications of these underground developments. The book highlights how efforts to gentrify these spaces have led to new forms of social fragmentation and an evolving aesthetic of inequality. By shifting the focus from traditional urban studies to the vertical dimensions of gentrification, O’Neill prompts critical questions about inclusion and exclusion in urban environments, making this work relevant for those interested in urban planning, social science, and public policy.
Official synopsis Publisher
This book gets to the bottom of the twenty-first-century city, literally. Underground moves beneath Romania’s capital, Bucharest, to examine how the demands of global accumulation have extended urban life not just upward into higher skylines, and outward to ever more distant peripheries, but also downward beneath city sidewalks. Underground details how developers and municipal officials have invested tremendous sums of money to gentrify and expand Bucharest’s constellation of subterranean Metro stations and pedestrian pathways, basements and cellars, bunkers and crypts to provide upwardly mobile residents with space to live, work, and play in an overcrowded and increasingly unaffordable city center. In this sense, the repurposed underground facilitates dreams of middle-class ascendancy. This sense of optimism, the book shows, invariably gives way to ambivalence as the middle classes confront the indignities of being incorporated into the city from below.
Bruce O’Neill argues that these loosely coordinated efforts have not only introduced novel forms of social fragmentation but also a new aesthetics of inequality that are fundamentally shaping where and how the middle classes fit in the city. Pushing urban studies beyond a cartographic perspective–with its horizontal focus upon centers and peripheries, walls and gates–O’Neill brings into focus the vertical dynamics of gentrification that place some “on the bottom” and others “on top” of the city. As cities around the world extend further downward in the name of development and sustainability, Underground makes clear that scholars and practitioners of the twenty-first-century city will need to become ever more attuned to the cultural politics of urban verticality, asking not just who is included in the city and who has been pressed outside of it, but also who is on top and who is placed on the bottom.
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