Punta del este is uruguay's uber rich 'gated city' a glimpse of our urban future

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Punta del Este: is Uruguay's uber-rich 'gated city' a glimpse of our urban future? Astronomic rents and zero public housing keep the haves and have-nots apart in the exclusive Uruguayan coastal city. But is this dystopian ‘paradise’ preempting the path on which other global cities are set? Oliver Balch in Punta del Este Wednesday 20 January 2016 08.00 GMT

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sun-tanned cocktail waitress drops a sprig of mint into a mojito in the members-only bar at the Punta del Este racetrack. It is the second ePrix of the season (think Formula 1 with battery engines; more high-pitched squeal than guttural ‘vroom’) and this exclusive Uruguayan beach-side city is playing host. Banners for Julius Baer, a Swiss private bank, flap in the wind. Lycra-clad models hand out hors d’oeuvres. And the world is good. At least, it is for the rich of Punta del Este. Ever since wealthy Argentine and Uruguayan holidaymakers discovered this sun-drenched peninsula in the early 20th century, the city has enjoyed a reputation as a playground for the elite. Today, multimillion dollar yachts crowd bow to stern in the marina. Skyscraper apartments stretch into the cloudless azure skies. Cruise liners bob on the horizon. “It’s very important for us to have exactly the right city for the image we’re trying to create,” says Alejandro Agag, chief executive of Formula E, which counts Moscow, Berlin, Beijing and Long Beach, California among its global race destinations. “We’re looking for absolutely landmark cityscapes.” Punta del Este ticks that box. Located on Uruguay’s southern coast, the city reeks of cash and cool. Celebrities flock here, and in their wake come the bankers and politicos, the impresarios and powerbrokers. The “St Tropez of South America” is how the real estate agents like to brand it. The quantity of top-dollar houses has persuaded the property arms of Christie’s and Sotheby’s to set up local offices in recent years. Monthly holiday rents can easily run into five figures during high season (US dollars that is, not local pesos), which lasts a matter of weeks over December and January. South America isn’t immune to gilded ghettos, of course. Over recent decades, gated communities have begun cropping up on the fringes of every major city. Their entrances guarded, their driveways patrolled, their residents tucked up safely in spacious homes with identikit pools and perfect lawns. Imagine that model spreading city-wide, though, and you have something akin to Punta del Este. This moneyed metropolis has no gun-toting security at the entrance, but there might as well be. Astronomic rents and zero public housing effectively keep the haves and have-nots apart. Even the middle-classes don’t get a look in. Think Monaco moved to Mali and you get the idea: a city so geographically incongruous (Uruguay ranks 82nd in the world in terms of GDP per capita, two places above Gabon), and so socially homogeneous, that it feels like a fairyland. But is this dystopian “paradise” really so preposterous? Or has Punta just preempted the path on which other global cities are set? Look at London; what is central London if not an enclave of the uber-rich already? Council tenants


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