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Aveiro Costa Nova -

Abstract: The Costa Nova do Vargo, a coastal strip adjacent to the Ria de Aveiro lagoon in northern Portugal, presents a rare case study in vernacular evolution. While globally recognized for its iconic palheiros (striped wooden houses), this landscape is a palimpsest of ecological adaptation, industrial collapse, and postmodern tourist rebranding. This paper argues that the visual identity of Costa Nova—specifically its red, yellow, blue, green, and black stripes—is not merely aesthetic but a semiotic artifact of 19th-century fishery infrastructure, 20th-century salt economy decline, and 21st-century heritage branding. Through a lens of landscape geography and material culture studies, we examine how a functional working-class settlement was transformed into a luxury residential and touristic icon, revealing tensions between authenticity, preservation, and commodification. 1. Introduction: The Paradox of the Palheiro The postcards of Costa Nova show a perfect alignment: candy-striped wooden facades reflecting in calm lagoon waters, with colorful moliceiro boats drifting by. Yet this image obscures a violent environmental and economic history. Located on a sandbar peninsula (the Costa Nova ) separating the Atlantic Ocean from the Ria de Aveiro, the area was uninhabitable marshland until the 19th century. The palheiro —originally a thatched, unadorned storage shed for fishing gear—has become a symbol of Portuguese coastal identity, but its current form is a product of repeated reinvention.