“…Consequently, although some argue that, due to the absence of direct displacement, new construction does not fall into the category of gentrification (Lambert, Boddy 2002;Hamnett 2003;Boddy 2007), we believe that it is rational to include newbuild developments into the framework of gentrification research. Such reasoning is also reflected in a wide range of studies that picked up the concept of new-build gentrification to describe new urban trends in cities like London (Davidson, Lees 2005, Montreal (Germain, Rose 2000;Rose 2002), in Swiss cities (Rerat et al 2010) or Berlin (Holm 2010;Marquardt et al 2013), but also in second-tier West European cities like Newcastle (Cameron 2003), Glasgow and Rotterdam (Doucet, van Kempen, van Weesep 2011) or, outside the West European/North American context, in Shanghai (He 2008), Cape Town (Visser, Kotze 2008) and Tokyo (Lützeler 2008). In post-socialist Europe, although new-build residential projects have been discussed in the works on socio-spatial change in the post-socialist city (Badyina, Golubchikov 2005;Cook 2010; Kovacs, Wiessner, Zischner 2012), new-build gentrification has not been studied systematically.…”