Transcript for:
Impact of International Events on Rio's Communities

When you leave the International Airport of Rio de Janeiro and head towards the south of the city which is where all the beaches are, you pass a sprawling informal settlement called Maré. it's one of hundreds of neglected shanty towns like this in Rio. It goes on for miles. But when you pass by there today all you see is this wall. Look at this map of Rio: Here's the part that you probably know. It's the South Zone it's where all the iconic beaches are. Maré is in Rio's North Zone which is where most of the city's poor live. They don't have sewage systems they don't have housing rights they don't have anything, but you know the city is really concerned about how loud the cars are because they're worried about you know the ears of the poor people that don't have food in their stomachs. The city just install the big new schoolin this community a few months ago. You'll note that when we get to this part of the highway, the wall becomes totally transparent, giving us a perfect view of the shiny new school Every time international attention comes to Rio, the city scrambles to build up infrastructure around tourism for visitors to see that it's this amazing city The problem is the visitors will come and they go, but the people of Rio are here to stay, and they're frustrated that their governments spends so much money to build up certain parts of the city and completely neglects others. The Olympics is no different in this case. In fact it's probably the biggest excuse Rio has to pour tons of money into making the city look good. This is Patricia. She rides the buses here in Rio and has noticed a major change in the bus routes recently. Patricia is showing me a few examples of the 11 bus lines that were cut between the poor North zone and the touristy rich South Zone, all in preparation for the Olympics. It's now much harder for a resident of the North Zone to get down to the beaches of Ipanema or Copacabana. So why put the bus lines? If discriminatory bus lines are bad here's where it gets worse. So back to this map: out here in the west is a place called Barra (Baha) R's are pronounced like H in Portuguese. This is a new part of the city where a lot of the Olympics action is happening. It's where the Olympic park is going to be built. And because of this it's home to what one real estate publication is calling a "cosmopolitan awakening." Tons of real estate investment. And of course a bunch of dramatic promotional videos to go with it. there's this one guy in Carlos Carvalho. He's a real estate developer and owns 64 million square feet in Barra. Last year in a series of interviews with big publications, Carvalho sketched out his dream for Barra. His goal is to turn this place into a "new Rio" a city for the "elite ... of good taste noble housing not housing for the poor." This guy's that 12 richest person in Brazil and he's got a ton of political influence to make his dream happen. Here he is with Rios mayor who's reelection campaign he generously donated to. They're just, you know, looking over plans for how they're going to reshape Barra. But there's one big problem for people like Carlos carvalho and his dream to make Barra a haven for the rich. If you're interested in land value, the less poor people you who have in your land the greater value can give to it. They think of the city as a place for you to invest and not a place to live in. Over the years little settlements of a few hundred families have popped up in Barra. It's usually workers unable to find affordable housing and creating communities of their own. These places have been around for decades and many of them have gained legal status for their property. But to the luxury-minded developers of this new part of town, these informal settlements represent a barrier to their plan. So when the Olympic park was planned for this area of Rio it wasn't much of a surprise when the city came in with eminent domain eviction orders, telling these communities that they would be moved to public housing complexes usually far out of sight of any international visitors. Most communities left, some happily taking the money that the city gave them, some mounted intense but failed resistance. But I visited one community that didn't give up on the fight to keep their homes. Vila Autódromo was a community of around 600 families near where the olympic park is being built. it's not on the actual park property but it's in the sight of the park. This is what it looks like today. People chose to go there because there was no drug trafficking or militia. It was very safe very-- a good sense of community. close to jobs and schools. It's hard to know that when you just visit the community, but you kind of get a sense of that by seeing the people who are still resisting, because they're holding on to that memory and they want to keep some of that alive. After years of fighting with the city hall, only 20 families of the original six hundred remain in this community. Fierce protesting in a flurry of international press got the mayor to finally concede, saying that the twenty families could stay, on condition that the city would build them nicer-looking homes, lest, heaven forbid, the international community catch a glimpse of the real Rio. Through the long fight, some of Vila Autódromo was able to stay. But this is rare. Most communities that receive eviction orders no longer exists. At least seventy seven thousand two hundred people have been removed from their homes in Rio de Janeiro since 2009. That's according to government data. And much of this to make way for infrastructure and real estate projects associated with the World Cup and the Olympic Games. So it's kind of a shame because the Olympics end up coming in and kind of whitewashing areas and reframing them you lose a lot of the personality of the city. of course there have been numerous benefits to the people of Rio thanks to the Olympics investments: New bus lines, revitalization of all parts of the city, museums, parks. This stuff will make life better in the city for sure. But in the end Billions of public dollars that were supposed to benefit the people ended up bowing to the interests of a few people with a lot of money. And instead of investing in the underserved Rio will once again hide them from view.