Residents gather in a redesigned "Superblock" in Barcelona, where urban design is used to facilitate social mixing among a population that is now 26.4% foreign-born.
BARCELONA · June 3, 2026 : As South Korea goes to the polls today, the winner of the Seoul mayoral race will inherit more than a housing crisis; they will inherit a demographic cliff. With a fertility rate of 0.72, Seoul’s survival depends on a rapid transition to a multi-ethnic society. Barcelona, where 26.4% of the population is foreign-born, offers a blueprint. While national governments control visa quotas, Barcelona has proven that mayors control the "infrastructure of welcome." The first 100 days of the next Seoul administration must prioritize the physical conditions for belonging.
The Infrastructure of Interaction
Barcelona’s highest-in-Europe social integration score is not an accident of culture, but a result of deliberate urban form. Through its "Interculturality Plan," the city transitioned from simple multiculturalism to active interaction. This is achieved in the streets. Barcelona’s "Superblocks" and fine-grained street networks are designed to force everyday contact in shared spaces like pocket parks and libraries. For Seoul’s new mayor, the integration budget should not be spent on "foreigner centers," but on upgrading public squares in immigrant-dense districts like Yeongdeungpo and Guro to ensure they function as social mixing engines rather than parallel enclaves.
The Mayoral Mandate vs. National Law
Seoul’s mayor cannot change national immigration law, but they can redefine "urban citizenship." Barcelona’s success lies in separating residency from employment contracts at the local service level, ensuring all inhabitants have equal access to city infrastructure. By adopting an "Intercultural Seoul" framework, the incoming mayor can use the municipal budget to fund bilingual city services and neighborhood-level public space investments. These are local decisions that change the political conditions for national immigration reform by proving that a diverse city can remain cohesive and safe.
Designing for a New Seoul
The 0.72 fertility crisis means the "old Seoul" of ethnic homogeneity is over. The question for today’s winner is whether the city will define itself by decline or by its response to it. Barcelona’s model suggests that high-quality, permeable urban design is the most effective tool for preventing social segregation. By investing in the physical quality of social relations: building parks where diverse groups naturally meet: Seoul’s new leadership can turn a demographic crisis into a new era of urban vitality. The arithmetic of the city demands nothing less.


