regeneration Archives - Positive News Good journalism about good things Tue, 10 Feb 2026 14:02:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://www.positive.news/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/cropped-P.N_Icon_Navy-150x150.png regeneration Archives - Positive News 32 32 Will Pride in Place put communities back in charge of regeneration? https://www.positive.news/society/will-pride-in-place-put-communities-back-in-charge-of-regeneration/ Fri, 06 Feb 2026 13:09:39 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=566071 Tom Pattinson talks to the UK prime minister about a new scheme to help communities revive their neighbourhoods

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The photo series celebrating the people cultivating hope, from soil to sea https://www.positive.news/environment/the-photography-series-celebrating-the-people-cultivating-hope-from-soil-to-sea/ Tue, 04 Nov 2025 11:39:15 +0000 https://www.positive.news/?p=550276 A new arts project pairs photographers and poets with farmers, fishers and food growers to tell powerful stories of regeneration

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From drugs to dreams: the unlikely turnaround of Medellin https://www.positive.news/economics/drugs-dreams-turnaround-medellin/ https://www.positive.news/economics/drugs-dreams-turnaround-medellin/#respond Fri, 25 Apr 2014 05:00:25 +0000 http://positivenews.org.uk/?p=15183 From infamous drugs cartels, record homicide levels and widespread poverty, to economic strength, innovation and enterprise, Colombia’s city of Medellin has undergone a serious transition that’s changing the attitudes of citizens and tourists alike

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From infamous drugs cartels, record homicide levels and widespread poverty, to economic strength, innovation and enterprise, Colombia’s city of Medellin has undergone a serious transition that’s changing the attitudes of citizens and tourists alike

Pablo Àlvarez Correa shows tourists around downtown Medellin. He kicks off the tour by recalling the time he was detained by security staff after they confused him with the infamous drug-lord Pablo Escobar, who dominated the city’s reputation so profoundly that despite his death almost 20 years ago, tourists still avoid ‘drug-cartel Medellin’ today. Àlvarez Correa’s company, Real City Tours, aims to bring tourists closer to the ‘real’ Medellin: the city’s violent history and continuing poverty, but also the vibrant, metropolitan city Medellin is becoming.

The tour starts at the Alpujarra metro station. “Fifteen years ago this would have been impossible,” he says. “Security was not good in any direction. Now on the tour we visit hectic places; even in downtown you feel safe.”

Bosques de Luz (forest of light) in Cisneros Square is part of the government’s democratic architecture initiative to transform the city’s most destitute areas into visually stunning tourist attractions. Àlvarez Correa ensures his tours pause at Bosques de Luz, a square filled with 300 light masts that stand at over 22m tall. According to local media, the square descended into a “criminal underworld” after the El Pedrero market partially burned down in 1968. Now the Forest of Light is a symbolic landmark feature.

Between 2005 and 2008, five libraries, known locally as library parks, were built in Medellin’s notoriously dangerous neighbourhoods. The Santa Domingo neighbourhood, which was so unstable a 5pm curfew was enforced up until 2003, now boasts Spain Library Park. Designed by award-winning architect Giancarlo Mazzanti, this landmark resembles three black stones that light up at night.

“Fifteen years ago this tour would have been impossible. Now even in downtown you feel safe”

Medellin’s social development is intertwined with its economic success. In 1991, the city’s government built Colombia’s first – and only – metro system, designed to provide cheap and rapid transport to Medellin’s poorer hillside neighbourhoods. A metro-cable and 385ft escalator were also built to address the needs of Medellin’s underdeveloped communities that have been pushed further into the city’s mountainous inclines. Not only does the metro system strengthen Medellin’s infrastructure, but also provides impressive views of the city’s Andes mountain landscape. The metro-cable is fast becoming a tourist attraction in its own right.

Àlvarez Correa notes that when he first began guiding tourists around Medellin his customers were predominantly from hostels, but now he tours with “not only backpackers, but professional couples on holiday, retired couples … people from five-star hotels.” Medellin’s government has made efforts to nurture the city’s tourism industry, allowing tax exemption for up to 30 years on new-build hotels and deferring VAT upon capital goods used for tourism exports. The city has recently been selected to host the 2015 Tourism World Organization Assembly.

Àlvarez Correa received no “big [financial] injection” for his successful business, and says that he applied the concepts he learned studying for his master’s degree in business. For Àlvarez Correa, the city’s culture is “in terms of tourism, open to innovation,” and “allows this kind of experiment.” In a surprising transition from the city’s situation in 1991, Medellin is now emerging as an economic and social leader of Latin America. The World Bank ranked Colombia as third in Latin America in its 2013 Doing Business report. But this has not been a smooth journey. For example, a programme aimed at benefiting demobilised armed militants managed to graduate only 129 out of 5,500 participants from their 18-month course, and despite a decrease from 6,349 reported homicides in 1991 to 771 homicides in 2007, violence re-spiked between 2009 and 2011.

However, Medellin won the Wall Street Journal’s search for the most innovative city of the year in 2012. This award not only recognised the city’s metro system, library parks and tourism investment, but also initiatives such as the Cluster City programme, the government-sponsored enterprise aiming to increase the city’s economic competitiveness through supporting small- and medium-sized businesses. In addition to the average 3-13% productivity increase for supported companies, the programme also reported 1,034 businesses were ‘supported with a gender perspective’.

Pablo Àlvarez Correa says he started Real City Tours because “people say if my generation don’t do something for Colombia, no one will.” Medellin is becoming an attractive city with its open green botanical gardens, library parks and enterprising business climate. But for Àlvarez Correa, the city’s progress lies in the changing attitudes he sees towards Medellin. His tour customers comment that after learning about the city’s history “we didn’t really like Medellin, now we love this city.”

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Quids in: Liverpool houses sold for £1 in ambitious regeneration scheme https://www.positive.news/society/quids-in-liverpool-houses-sold-1-ambitious-regeneration-scheme/ https://www.positive.news/society/quids-in-liverpool-houses-sold-1-ambitious-regeneration-scheme/#comments Tue, 03 Dec 2013 01:57:54 +0000 http://positivenews.org.uk/?p=14314 The project aims to rebuild derelict communities and give hope to those struggling to get on the property ladder

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The project aims to rebuild derelict communities and give hope to those struggling to get on the property ladder

The keys to Liverpool’s first £1 home have been handed over to its new owners as part of a regeneration drive designed to breathe life into run-down areas of the city.

Liverpool Council offered the city’s residents the chance to buy one of 20 homes for the meagre sum, providing they commit to bringing the property up to scratch, and to live in it for at least five years.

Applicants must live or work in Liverpool, be a first-time buyer, and take home no more than £35,000 per year (£40,000 for families).

There is no deposit payable on the property, but successful candidates must pay back the cost of refurbishment, which is expected to be around £30,000. At around £293 per month for ten years, this represents better value than a mortgage or renting.

Married father-of-two Jayalal Madde is Liverpool’s first £1 home recipient, and one of 10 to benefit from the pilot scheme, which aims to bring 1,000 empty homes back into use across the city. Mr Madde’s new home sits on Cairns Street, Granby, where properties once sold for £70,000.

Mayor of Liverpool, Joe Anderson, said: “I’m delighted to be officially handing over the keys to the first recipient of a home for a pound.

“We’ve had an amazing response to this scheme and have been absolutely inundated with applications, so to already be in a position to allocate the first 10 homes is fantastic.

“We are only looking for people who have a genuine commitment to bringing these properties back to life and turning them into a home they are proud to live in.”

Mayor Anderson added: “Properties in these areas have lain empty for too long – but in tough economic times, we need to be creative and look at doing things differently.”

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