In Panama City’s booming colonial core, locals fight to stay
PANAMA CITY — Esther Marina Sanchez has watched her neighbourhood — the heart of Panama City — transformed by its designation as a UNESCO world heritage site. Tourists and well-heeled Panamanians now stroll the paving-stone streets among gaudy hotels, fancy restaurants and trendy discos that have popped up in once-dilapidated colonial-era buildings.
Gone are the gangs, the decay and abandoned structures — as well as Sanchez’s home, and those of most of her neighbours.
Sanchez recalled how her landowner offered the family money 2 1/2 years ago, but said they didn’t really have a choice: “Take it or leave it, but you’re leaving.”
A fast-moving real estate boom spurred by the 1997 declaration of the Casco Antiguo district as a world heritage site has irrevocably altered the character of the neighbourhood.
