4.2 Article

High-rise plastic: Socio-material entanglements in apartments

Journal

GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
Volume 188, Issue 4, Pages 571-584

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/geoj.12457

Keywords

apartments; entanglements; high-rise; lived experience; plastic; waste

Categories

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [LP150100089, IH200100010]
  2. Australian Research Council [LP150100089, IH200100010] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Plastic is a persistent problem and key mediator in westernised cities, supporting daily life in small apartments through waste management, storage, and affordable ornaments and furniture. This paper explores the socio-material entanglements of plastic in apartments in Melbourne, London, Barcelona, and Perth, revealing its role in mediating high-rise living inequalities. The study highlights the importance of relational approaches in understanding the mundane but critical entanglements of plastic and everyday life in apartments, as well as the significance of mundane infrastructures in shaping plastic consumption and apartment inequalities.
Plastic is a persistent problem in westernised cities. Yet it is also a key mediator, affording and assisting the everyday. In small apartments, it supports daily life by assisting with waste management, storage, and provisioning of affordable ornaments and furniture. Plastic, in this context, is a mundane and utilitarian substrate to apartment life, as well as being a problematic potential pollutant. Recognising the diverse contributions to research on high-density living, this paper draws on vertical urbanism and relational ideas of home. It explores the socio-material entanglements of plastic in apartments through household interviews across Melbourne, London, Barcelona, and Perth. The research reveals ways in which plastic mediates the material inequalities of high-rise living, typified by entanglements of space constraint, transience, and waste management. The contribution is twofold. Theoretically, our work suggests a direction for socio-materialities research in reframing ideas of home as a static, physical site, to one that is more contingent materially and spatially. As various households adapt and make do, their refuges in the sky are being reconfigured physically and symbolically by and through plastic. Relational approaches can help to reveal the mundane but critical entanglements of plastic and everyday life in apartments. Second, empirically, we show that mundane infrastructures matter; they shape the spaces and places of plastic and apartment inequalities. Thus, policy interventions that target household behaviours can only have a marginal impact on plastic consumption where uneven infrastructures remain. Moreover, they may direct attention away from where change might be more promising, such as wider social rules and meanings around plastic, and the materialities of building design/management for waste infrastructures both inside and outside the apartment.

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