ABSTRACT

This chapter discusses state interventions in Van der Pekbuurt (VDP-buurt), a low-income former working-class neighborhood in Amsterdam. We focus on “quarter making,” which refers to policymakers catering to middle-class preferences through social policies, initiatives, and service provision, in anticipation of in-moving middle-class residents as part of regeneration and gentrification strategies. Introducing and facilitating cultural entrepreneurs and artists in the representation of what the neighborhood is, and ought to be, helps to move the area toward the policymakers’ future vision. As such, these representations undermine the legitimacy of long-term residents’ efforts and interests. Interviews with long-term residents reveal that the changes in the neighborhood instill a sense of loss of place, exacerbated by cuts in local service provision. For these reasons, state intervention in VDP-buurt constitutes a “soft force” approach to state-sponsored gentrification.