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    Back to Design and Architecture

    Design and Architecture

    Has 'Zombie Urbanism' Gripped the Global City?

    What happens when residential real estate is treated like a safe deposit box? DnA explores the urban impact of global investment in high end homes -- in London, New York and L.A.

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    By Frances Anderton • Feb 24, 2015 • 28m Listen

    What happens when residential real estate is treated like a safe deposit box? DnA explores the urban impact of global investment in high end homes -- in London, New York and L.A.

    Photo: Time Warner Center in New York City. Courtesy of Kiah Ankoor.

    In this episode

    2 stories
    1. 0:04

      The Life -- and Death -- of London and New York

      Towers of Secrecy , a New York Times series, examined the shady characters behind the shell companies that own condos in the ritzy Time Warner Center. This DnA broadcast looks at another aspect of global investment in residential property: the urban impact. How does it affect local business? Why is the trend being called “zombie urbanism?”

      Read the story
      14 min
    2. 13:59

      “Zombie Urbanism” and L.A.

      Los Angeles is attracting overseas investment in luxury homes in posh neighborhoods and in new high-rise condo developments in downtown. Is this a problem, or a sign of LA’s continued renewal? Does it make housing even less affordable to regular buyers? What does it mean for designers when they design for a faceless client?

      Read the story
      14 min
    • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

      Frances Anderton

      architecture critic and author

    • KCRW placeholder

      Caroline Chamberlain

      KUOW

      Culture

    In this episode

    2 stories
    1. 0:0414 min

      The Life -- and Death -- of London and New York

    2. 13:5914 min

      “Zombie Urbanism” and L.A.

    Back to Design and Architecture