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Urban preferences, amenities and age: Exploring the spatial distribution of age in Stockholm from 1991 to 2011

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Andersson, M 
Larsson, JP 
Wernberg, J 

Abstract

jats:titleAbstract</jats:title>jats:pCities exhibit a rich and complex heterogeneity in people and activities. This poses a sizable challenge for planners when planning new neighbourhoods or the reconstruction of old ones as well as when considering the allocation of supply of and demand for amenities, e.g. kindergartens or health facilities. However, individual preferences may also exhibit common denominators that may provide structure to this heterogeneity. One such denominator is age. In this paper we introduce the concept of jats:italicneighbourhood age</jats:italic>, defined as the mean age of people living in exogenously defined squares of jats:styled-content1kmjats:sup2</jats:sup></jats:styled-content> in a city. We use highly disaggregated geocoded data to map how the spatial distribution of neighbourhood age changes over a 20‐year period from 1991 to 2011 in the city of Stockholm, Sweden. We then test the correlation between neighbourhood age and two categories of urban amenities: supply of local consumption amenities and distance to the city's central business district (CBD). The paper presents three main findings: First, neighbourhood age changes and polarizes significantly over the observed period, suggesting that different age groups are concentrating in different parts of the city. Second, there is a rejuvenation in the central parts of the city but also in more distant clusters of amenities. Third, over a long‐term perspective, the results suggest that local clusters of consumption amenities outside the inner city may become increasingly attractive to younger people. Our conclusion is that neighbourhood age and age‐related patterns over time provides a tool for planners to better understand the spatial distribution of age‐related demand.</jats:p>

Description

Keywords

changes, development, land use patterns, regional economic activity: growth, size and spatial distributions of regional economic activity

Journal Title

Regional Science Policy and Practice

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1757-7802
1757-7802

Volume Title

10

Publisher

Wiley