theme-parking
pp. Adding kitschy, superficial, or inauthentic features to a public space.
Examples
2012
He did it while taking a stand against gentrification, and against the theme-parking of history, by insisting that real people must continue to live, work, study and retire amid the historic plazas, palaces, museums and boutique hotels.
—David Montgomery, “Eusebio Leal: The man who would save Old Havana,” The Washington Post, May 20, 2012
2008
The emergence of ‘malled' shopping districts with private security guards, the huge expansion of gated communities, the spread of CCTV surveillance on the streets, and the general theme-parking and militarization of urban public space have all placed limits on civic mobility…, and hence civic freedom.
—Mimi Sheller, “Mobility, Freedom and Public Space,” The Ethics of Mobilities, November 01, 2008
1994 (earliest)
New York City thrives on change, but sometimes the changes are hard to swallow. The theme-parking of 57th Street is a case in point. Just now, this quintessentially Manhattan thoroughfare looks to be on the verge of seceding from New York and linking up with Anaheim, Calif., and Orlando, Fla., in a confederacy of kitsch.
—Herbert Muschamp, “On West 57th, a Confederacy of Kitsch,” The New York Times, June 05, 1994