Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 21 segundos...
Inicio  /  Urban Science  /  Vol: 2 Par: 3 (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Can Shrinking Cities Demolish Vacancy? An Empirical Evaluation of a Demolition-First Approach to Vacancy Management in Buffalo, NY, USA

Russell Weaver and Jason Knight    

Resumen

Publicly-funded demolition of vacant structures is an essential tool used in shrinking cities to eliminate nuisances and, often, reduce vacancy rates. Concerning the latter, however, when shrinking cities implement large-scale demolition programs independent of complementary planning efforts, it is reasonable to expect impacts on vacancy to be negligible. Among other reasons, demolition operates only on the outflow of existing vacant structures and largely fails to grapple with inflows that add to vacancy over time. This article evaluates an ambitious demolition program in Buffalo, NY, USA, that sought, explicitly, to lower the municipality?s overall vacancy rate. Evidence from statistical changepoint models and Granger tests suggest that, while Buffalo?s overall vacancy rate, measured as undeliverable postal addresses, appeared to decrease around the time of the program, the drop was not linked to elevated demolition activity. The same finding holds for the subarea in which demolitions were spatiotemporally clustered. Although this lack of efficacy is potentially because the city failed to demolish its targeted number of structures, we argue that the likelier explanation is that demolition was not part of a holistic planning strategy. These results have important implications for using large-scale demolition programs as standalone vacancy management policies in shrinking cities.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Wenyuan Zhang, Guoxin Tan, Songyin Zheng, Chuanming Sun, Xiaohan Kong and Zhaobin Liu    
The availability of very high spatial resolution (VHR) remote sensing imagery provides unique opportunities to exploit meaningful change information in detail with object-oriented image analysis. This study investigated land cover (LC) changes in Shahu L... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Daniel Colonia, Judith Torres, Wilfried Haeberli, Simone Schauwecker, Eliane Braendle, Claudia Giraldez and Alejo Cochachin    
Global warming causes rapid shrinking of mountain glaciers. New lakes can, thus, form in the future where overdeepenings in the beds of still-existing glaciers are becoming exposed. Such new lakes can be amplifiers of natural hazards to downstream popula... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Thomas Porathe     Pág. 233 - 242
This paper aims to summarize and make some conclusions from findings of five EU project during the period 2009?2015. In the ACCSEAS project (2012?2015) the future accessibility of the North Sea region was investigated from a shipping perspective. The Eff... ver más

 
Qingting Li, Linlin Lu, Cuizhen Wang, Yingkui Li, Yue Sui and Huadong Guo    
Inland water bodies, which are critical freshwater resources for arid and semi-arid areas, are very sensitive to climate change and human disturbance. In this paper, we derived a time series of major lake surface areas across Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Re... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Chen-Jia Huang, Ming-Hsi Hsu, Wei-Hsien Teng and Yen-Hsiang Wang    
Due to the special hydrographic and physiographic conditions in Taiwan, flooding is likely to occur in the middle and lower reaches of a plain whenever serious rainstorm events occurred. Note worthily, the loss of lives and property caused by flooding ar... ver más
Revista: Water