Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 16 segundos...
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Spatial Effect of Accessibility to Public Service Facilities on Housing Prices: Highlighting the Housing Equity

Peiheng Yu    
Esther H. K. Yung    
Edwin H. W. Chan    
Shujin Zhang    
Siqiang Wang and Yiyun Chen    

Resumen

Understanding how public service accessibility is related to housing prices is crucial to housing equity, yet the heterogeneous capitalisation effect remains unknown. This study aims to investigate the spatial effect of public service accessibility on housing prices in rapidly urbanising regions. Here, we propose a novel methodological framework that integrates the hedonic price model, geographical detector model and the spatial association detector model to understand housing equity issues. The rapidly rising housing prices, vastly transformed urban planning and heterogeneous land use patterns make the urban centre of Wuhan a typical case study. High-value units of public service accessibility are concentrated in built-up areas, while low-value units are located at the urban fringe. The results indicate that larger public services have more significant clustering effects than smaller ones. Recreational, medical, educational and financial facilities all have capitalisation effects on housing prices. Both the geographical detector model and the spatial association detector model could identify the drivers of housing prices, but the explanatory power of the latter is greater and could enhance the validity and reliability of the findings. We further find that the explanatory power of the driving factors on housing prices obtained from the spatial association detector model is greater than that of the geographical detector model. Based on the spatial association detector model, the main drivers of public service facilities are accessibility to restaurants and bars and accessibility to ATMs. In addition, there are bivariate or nonlinear enhancement effects between each pair of driving factors. This approach provides significant insights for urban environmental development planning and local real estate planning.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Sang-Hyun Chung and Jun Ha Kim    
Seoul is the first city in South Korea to provide affordable social housing, beginning in 2015. Despite the importance of studying its space, configuration, and functionality, which impact the residents? quality of life, research on social housing in Seo... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Asmaa Al-Mohannadi, Mark David Major, Raffaello Furlan, Rashid Saad Al-Matwi and Rima J. Isaifan    
Housing is a basic human need and a fundamental component of settlement status. The architectural form and spatial provisions of housing evolve in line with?and transform to meet?a specific era?s needs. Globalization has been responsible for changing the... ver más
Revista: Urban Science

 
Monika Szopinska-Mularz and Steffen Lehmann    
This study aims to analyse the transformation of urban greenery into greenfield housing development from 2019 to 2023 in the medium-sized city of Rzeszow (Poland) by evaluating the validity of references to the greenery in advertising texts on the develo... ver más
Revista: Buildings

 
Margot Geerts, Seppe vanden Broucke and Jochen De Weerdt    
Predicting house prices is a challenging task that many researchers have attempted to address. As accurate house prices allow better informing parties in the real estate market, improving housing policies and real estate appraisal, a comprehensive overvi... ver más

 
Shunyi Liao, Feng Gao, Lei Feng, Jiemin Wu, Zexia Wang and Wangyang Chen    
Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest (OHCA) causes a high mortality rate each year, which is a threat to human well-being and health. An automated external defibrillator (AED) is an effective device for heart attack-related diseases and is a panacea to save OH... ver más