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48 One Hyde Park: London, UK

  • Rowland Atkinson
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50 Dark Destinations
This chapter is in the book 50 Dark Destinations

Abstract

One Hyde Park is an imposing yet anonymous residential block in London’s West End. Its four wings and predominantly glass façade stand opposite the Harvey Nichols department store, more or less a stone’s throw from Harrods in Knightsbridge. The building comprises 86 apartments, four penthouses and sits on top of four further tiers of basement levels that include car parking, a 66ft swimming pool, library and golf range. Developments like One Hyde Park have blossomed over the past two decades as the financialisation of the world economy and its general expansion, particularly in destabilised regions of the world, yielded a global cadre of the wealthy. If we could see through a lens capable of tracking global capital flows and massive personal gains (much of it ill-gotten or excessive) the block of One Hyde Park, and others like it, can be seen as a primary destination, for cash as much as for its highly secretive residents. Such developments are the dark lures of capital, helping to relieve wealthy clients of burdensome bags of cash, particularly where such holdings needed to be translated from criminal cash into prime real estate in order to reintegrate that money into the formal economy.

Why might we include a block of expensive apartments in a guide to dark tourism sites? The first answer to this question would be to say that we should reframe it. We can think of One Hyde Park as a tourist destination, but it is primarily to its owners and residents that we should look, rather than to those who might saunter round its perimeter

Abstract

One Hyde Park is an imposing yet anonymous residential block in London’s West End. Its four wings and predominantly glass façade stand opposite the Harvey Nichols department store, more or less a stone’s throw from Harrods in Knightsbridge. The building comprises 86 apartments, four penthouses and sits on top of four further tiers of basement levels that include car parking, a 66ft swimming pool, library and golf range. Developments like One Hyde Park have blossomed over the past two decades as the financialisation of the world economy and its general expansion, particularly in destabilised regions of the world, yielded a global cadre of the wealthy. If we could see through a lens capable of tracking global capital flows and massive personal gains (much of it ill-gotten or excessive) the block of One Hyde Park, and others like it, can be seen as a primary destination, for cash as much as for its highly secretive residents. Such developments are the dark lures of capital, helping to relieve wealthy clients of burdensome bags of cash, particularly where such holdings needed to be translated from criminal cash into prime real estate in order to reintegrate that money into the formal economy.

Why might we include a block of expensive apartments in a guide to dark tourism sites? The first answer to this question would be to say that we should reframe it. We can think of One Hyde Park as a tourist destination, but it is primarily to its owners and residents that we should look, rather than to those who might saunter round its perimeter

Chapters in this book

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. List of figures x
  4. About the editors xi
  5. Acknowledgements xiii
  6. Introduction 1
  7. Cocaine Bear: Fun Mall, Lexington, Kentucky, USA 9
  8. Whitney Plantation: New Orleans, Louisiana, USA 14
  9. National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution: Washington, DC, USA 24
  10. From Newgate Prison to Tyburn Tree: the Old Bailey, London, UK 29
  11. Jack the Ripper tour: Whitechapel, London, UK 35
  12. The Alcatraz East Crime Museum: Pigeon Forge, Tennessee, USA 41
  13. The Museum of Death: Hollywood, Los Angeles, USA 50
  14. The Royal Armouries Museum: Leeds, UK 55
  15. The Black Dahlia tour: Los Angeles, California, USA 59
  16. The ‘Execution Dock’: Wapping, East London, UK 65
  17. Auschwitz: Oświęcim, Poland 71
  18. Jeju 4:3 memorial: Jeju Island, South Korea 80
  19. Museum Dr. Guislain: Ghent, Belgium 88
  20. Karosta Prison Hotel: Liepāja, Latvia 92
  21. The Clink prison-based restaurant: Brixton, London, UK 98
  22. The 9/11 memorial and museum: New York, New York, USA 104
  23. The Tuol Sleng Museum of Genocidal Crimes: Phnom Penh, Cambodia 107
  24. Choeung Ek killing field: Phnom Penh, Cambodia 116
  25. Blue lights in the Red Light District: Amsterdam, the Netherlands 122
  26. Trophy hunting: sub-Saharan Africa 128
  27. ‘The ugly side to the beautiful game’: Qatar 135
  28. Burning Man festival: Black Rock Desert, Nevada, USA 140
  29. Magaluf: Majorca 147
  30. ‘Holiday Hooters’: Hong Kong 153
  31. Scilla: Calabria, Italy 159
  32. The Kray twins tours: London, UK 165
  33. Backpacking in the outback: Uluru, Northern Territory, Australia 171
  34. The hippie trail: Nepal, South Asia 177
  35. The Museum of Confiscated Art: Brest, Belarus 182
  36. Steroid holidays: Sharm El Sheikh, Sinai Peninsula, Egypt 187
  37. The souks: Tunis, Tunisia 194
  38. Mezhyhirya Residence Museum: Novi Petrivtsi, Ukraine 200
  39. The great British seaside: various locations, UK 207
  40. The Biggie mural: Brooklyn, New York, USA 213
  41. The Rebus guided tour: Edinburgh, UK 217
  42. Volunteer tourism – ‘doing it for the ’gram’: Cambodia, Southeast Asia 223
  43. The staycation: home 230
  44. The ‘suicide forest’: Aokigahara, Japan 235
  45. Pitcairn Island: Pitcairn Islands, Pacific Ocean 245
  46. Favela tours: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 251
  47. Skid Row walking tours: Los Angeles, California, USA 258
  48. The 2019–20 anti-extradition protests: Hong Kong 264
  49. The Maldives: Republic of Maldives, Indian Ocean 271
  50. Death Road: La Paz to Coroico, Bolivia 276
  51. Vulture brains and muthi markets: Johannesburg, South Africa 282
  52. Dark tourism, ecocide and Alpine ski resorts: the Alps, Europe 288
  53. Boho Zone: Middlesbrough, UK 293
  54. One Hyde Park: London, UK 299
  55. Amazon warehouse tours: Rugeley, UK or virtual tour 305
  56. Disney World: Orlando, Florida, USA 315
  57. Conclusion 322
  58. References 325
  59. Index 394
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