Oversized territorial occupation in Chiclayo (Peru) has reduced the proximity among the residents. This process has generated multiple obsolescence spaces in the city’s downtown. Perhaps the neighborhood retains its own identity, still is required to introduce a flexible system that allows citizenship participation. We pursue to construct and estimate a new urban dynamic. In this article, we discuss about the participatory urbanism process as a response to the urban obsolescence in the city. In April 2021, a new law that manages and protects the public space based on the right to city, was approved. This contributes to build a new citizenship model, assembled by a catalogue of open infrastructures of public domain. Collaborative work between neighbors could provide the city with spontaneity caused by the citizen’s activity.
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