Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

‘Highway to Heaven’: the creation of a multicultural, religious landscape in suburban Richmond, British Columbia

2016; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 17; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/14649365.2015.1130848

ISSN

1470-1197

Autores

Claire Dwyer, Justin Kh Tse, David Ley,

Tópico(s)

Religion, Society, and Development

Resumo

We analyse the emergence of the 'Highway to Heaven', a distinctive landscape of more than 20 diverse religious buildings, in the suburban municipality of Richmond, outside Vancouver, to explore the intersections of immigration, planning, multiculturalism, religion and suburban space. In the context of wider contested planning disputes for new places of worship for immigrant communities, the creation of a designated 'Assembly District' in Richmond emerged as a creative response to multicultural planning. However, it is also a contradictory policy, co-opting religious communities to municipal requirements to safeguard agricultural land and prevent suburban sprawl, but with limited success. The unanticipated outcomes of a designated planning zone for religious buildings include production of an agglomeration of increasingly spectacular religious facilities that exceed municipal planning regulations. Such developments are accommodated through a celebratory narrative of municipal multiculturalism, but one that fails to engage with the communal narratives of the faith communities themselves and may exoticize or commodify religious identity.

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