Hyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate markets
<p>Recent years have witnessed a surge in the development of real estate data analytics platforms. These devices variously promise a revolution in investment and valuation, leading to a more transparent knowledge of market reality and more objective decision-making. To examine these claims, th...
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Format: | Thesis |
Language: | English |
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2020
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author | Shaw, J |
author2 | Graham, M |
author_facet | Graham, M Shaw, J |
author_sort | Shaw, J |
collection | OXFORD |
description | <p>Recent years have witnessed a surge in the development of real estate data analytics platforms. These devices variously promise a revolution in investment and valuation, leading to a more transparent knowledge of market reality and more objective decision-making. To examine these claims, this research adopts a theoretical framework from STS and critical data studies to examine the ethnographic case study of one prototype data analytics product throughout the early stages of its development and marketing. This product, <em>Dashboard X</em>, was designed to provide large institutional investors with a way to better know which areas of London were currently undergoing gentrification for the purpose of investing in Build-to-Rent housing. This study was followed by a series of interviews and participation in several industry events.</p>
<p>By examining the actors emerging around this would-be ‘market device’, this research explains that <em>Dashboard X</em> and similar platforms are in fact producing and circulating entirely new, subjective, and distinctly situated forms of real estate values, knowledges, and even assets. Furthermore, it is argued <em>Dashboard X</em> entails a series of theoretical and political implications that range from the co-performation of planetary gentrification and the expansion of rentier capitalism, to a ‘new urban colonialism’ and the greater ontological politics associated with bringing new real estate assets and markets into being. The key theoretical contribution is that these data analytics platforms do little to objectively increase investor rationality in the sense of knowing reality, but that the use of these technologies can nevertheless powerfully control the future trajectories and possibilities of a global real estate market by circulating the values and knowledges needed for its realisation. Hence, these new urban real estate values can precede their realisation in material marketplace reality through data analytics platforms as <em>hyperreal estate</em>.</p> |
first_indexed | 2024-03-07T01:48:49Z |
format | Thesis |
id | oxford-uuid:995bea51-7f36-4464-b233-238446e0bb41 |
institution | University of Oxford |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-07T01:48:49Z |
publishDate | 2020 |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:995bea51-7f36-4464-b233-238446e0bb412022-03-27T00:13:51ZHyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate marketsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:995bea51-7f36-4464-b233-238446e0bb41urban studiesSTSsociologygeographyanthropologyurban geographysociology of technologyEnglishHyrax Deposit2020Shaw, JGraham, MDorling, D<p>Recent years have witnessed a surge in the development of real estate data analytics platforms. These devices variously promise a revolution in investment and valuation, leading to a more transparent knowledge of market reality and more objective decision-making. To examine these claims, this research adopts a theoretical framework from STS and critical data studies to examine the ethnographic case study of one prototype data analytics product throughout the early stages of its development and marketing. This product, <em>Dashboard X</em>, was designed to provide large institutional investors with a way to better know which areas of London were currently undergoing gentrification for the purpose of investing in Build-to-Rent housing. This study was followed by a series of interviews and participation in several industry events.</p> <p>By examining the actors emerging around this would-be ‘market device’, this research explains that <em>Dashboard X</em> and similar platforms are in fact producing and circulating entirely new, subjective, and distinctly situated forms of real estate values, knowledges, and even assets. Furthermore, it is argued <em>Dashboard X</em> entails a series of theoretical and political implications that range from the co-performation of planetary gentrification and the expansion of rentier capitalism, to a ‘new urban colonialism’ and the greater ontological politics associated with bringing new real estate assets and markets into being. The key theoretical contribution is that these data analytics platforms do little to objectively increase investor rationality in the sense of knowing reality, but that the use of these technologies can nevertheless powerfully control the future trajectories and possibilities of a global real estate market by circulating the values and knowledges needed for its realisation. Hence, these new urban real estate values can precede their realisation in material marketplace reality through data analytics platforms as <em>hyperreal estate</em>.</p> |
spellingShingle | urban studies STS sociology geography anthropology urban geography sociology of technology Shaw, J Hyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate markets |
title | Hyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate markets |
title_full | Hyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate markets |
title_fullStr | Hyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate markets |
title_full_unstemmed | Hyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate markets |
title_short | Hyperreal estate: the production of new urban real estate markets |
title_sort | hyperreal estate the production of new urban real estate markets |
topic | urban studies STS sociology geography anthropology urban geography sociology of technology |
work_keys_str_mv | AT shawj hyperrealestatetheproductionofnewurbanrealestatemarkets |