In recent decades, modern cities have undergone various urban recovery processes in the context of their economic competition and in their attempt to promote themselves. Seville is a good example of this. The 1992 World Report, including the main actions around it, is the process of spatial transformation with the greatest significance to date in modern Spain. It was a decision of the state and regional administrations to select Seville, with the main focus being on equal development and reducing the differences between the northern and southern Spanish regions. On the occasion of the 1992 World's Fair, the city's goal was to restructure. This affected many things, including anarea of the historic center that undermined its identity and its authenticity, with negative impacts on the value of its properties and its former residents.