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Urban Transactions: Investigating the Relationship between Spatial Preference and Spatial Configuration in the City of Leeds

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Urban Transactions: Investigating the Relationship between Spatial Preference and Spatial Configuration in the City of Leeds. / Muldoon-Smith, Kevin; Greenhalgh, Paul; Dalton, Ruth et al.
2015. Paper presented at The 10th Space Syntax Symposium (SSS10), London, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Muldoon-Smith, K, Greenhalgh, P, Dalton, R, Alvanides, S, King, H & Sparkes, B 2015, 'Urban Transactions: Investigating the Relationship between Spatial Preference and Spatial Configuration in the City of Leeds', Paper presented at The 10th Space Syntax Symposium (SSS10), London, United Kingdom, 13/07/15 - 17/07/15. <http://www.sss10.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/>

APA

Muldoon-Smith, K., Greenhalgh, P., Dalton, R., Alvanides, S., King, H., & Sparkes, B. (2015). Urban Transactions: Investigating the Relationship between Spatial Preference and Spatial Configuration in the City of Leeds. Paper presented at The 10th Space Syntax Symposium (SSS10), London, United Kingdom. http://www.sss10.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/

Vancouver

Muldoon-Smith K, Greenhalgh P, Dalton R, Alvanides S, King H, Sparkes B. Urban Transactions: Investigating the Relationship between Spatial Preference and Spatial Configuration in the City of Leeds. 2015. Paper presented at The 10th Space Syntax Symposium (SSS10), London, United Kingdom.

Author

Muldoon-Smith, Kevin ; Greenhalgh, Paul ; Dalton, Ruth et al. / Urban Transactions : Investigating the Relationship between Spatial Preference and Spatial Configuration in the City of Leeds. Paper presented at The 10th Space Syntax Symposium (SSS10), London, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{bb58b36815a74bd1b1783070da9d2a87,
title = "Urban Transactions: Investigating the Relationship between Spatial Preference and Spatial Configuration in the City of Leeds",
abstract = "This paper describes a composite method that can be used to investigates the relationship between spatial preference (in relation to commercial real estate occupation) and spatial configuration. The key finding in this paper (based on research in the city of Leeds in the UK) is that there is a potential link between urban configuration and spatial preference that could be exploited. Traditionally, the pursuit of urban land economics has been supply driven, reliant on the rational assumptions of neo classical economic analysis. Consumer behaviour is typically an implicit assumption rather than explicit variable in traditional economic analysis. This is because it has been difficult to reveal the characteristics of economic demand (the subjective behaviour of real life participants in the urban land transaction process) and its interaction with the urban environment. In conclusion, the method demonstrated in this paper reveals how the human interaction with space (its behavioural characteristics and transactional dialogue), can be explicitly analysed, visualised and combined in order to improve the urban development process.",
author = "Kevin Muldoon-Smith and Paul Greenhalgh and Ruth Dalton and Seraphim Alvanides and Helen King and Bradley Sparkes",
year = "2015",
month = jul,
day = "13",
language = "English",
note = "The 10th Space Syntax Symposium (SSS10) ; Conference date: 13-07-2015 Through 17-07-2015",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Urban Transactions

T2 - The 10th Space Syntax Symposium (SSS10)

AU - Muldoon-Smith, Kevin

AU - Greenhalgh, Paul

AU - Dalton, Ruth

AU - Alvanides, Seraphim

AU - King, Helen

AU - Sparkes, Bradley

PY - 2015/7/13

Y1 - 2015/7/13

N2 - This paper describes a composite method that can be used to investigates the relationship between spatial preference (in relation to commercial real estate occupation) and spatial configuration. The key finding in this paper (based on research in the city of Leeds in the UK) is that there is a potential link between urban configuration and spatial preference that could be exploited. Traditionally, the pursuit of urban land economics has been supply driven, reliant on the rational assumptions of neo classical economic analysis. Consumer behaviour is typically an implicit assumption rather than explicit variable in traditional economic analysis. This is because it has been difficult to reveal the characteristics of economic demand (the subjective behaviour of real life participants in the urban land transaction process) and its interaction with the urban environment. In conclusion, the method demonstrated in this paper reveals how the human interaction with space (its behavioural characteristics and transactional dialogue), can be explicitly analysed, visualised and combined in order to improve the urban development process.

AB - This paper describes a composite method that can be used to investigates the relationship between spatial preference (in relation to commercial real estate occupation) and spatial configuration. The key finding in this paper (based on research in the city of Leeds in the UK) is that there is a potential link between urban configuration and spatial preference that could be exploited. Traditionally, the pursuit of urban land economics has been supply driven, reliant on the rational assumptions of neo classical economic analysis. Consumer behaviour is typically an implicit assumption rather than explicit variable in traditional economic analysis. This is because it has been difficult to reveal the characteristics of economic demand (the subjective behaviour of real life participants in the urban land transaction process) and its interaction with the urban environment. In conclusion, the method demonstrated in this paper reveals how the human interaction with space (its behavioural characteristics and transactional dialogue), can be explicitly analysed, visualised and combined in order to improve the urban development process.

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 13 July 2015 through 17 July 2015

ER -