The desire for 'vibrant', 'bohemian' neighbourhoods forms a focal point of the amenity preferences of Richard Florida's 'creative class' thesis. Here, a vibrant street culture, which includes cafes and restaurants spilling onto the pavement, is implied as being of key importance in the selection of a residential area for creative and knowledge workers. Drawing on quantitative and qualitative data, this paper examines the residential preferences of the 'creative class' in Dublin, Ireland. The results illustrate the continued importance of classic factors in residential decision-making, including housing cost, accessibility and travel-time to place of employment. Moreover, the results also illustrate how changes in the life-cycle, including t...
Inspired by creative class theory, municipal policymakers across North America are focusing on urban...
Living in the countryside/rural areas has, in recent decades, become a matter of personal choice for...
This paper pinpoints the problematic use of grouping creative people as a social class. Observations...
The desire for 'vibrant', 'bohemian' neighbourhoods forms a focal point of the amenity preferences o...
The desire for ‘vibrant’, ‘bohemian’ neighbourhoods forms a focal point of the amenity preferences o...
The creative knowledge city has received considerable attention in the last number of years, not onl...
The creative class is a much-contested concept, yet still very much in vogue among policy makers. Al...
The idea of the creative knowledge city has received considerable attention in the last number of ye...
An examination of residential preferences for less sustainable housing Dr. Peter Howley*, Dr. Mark S...
Richard Florida's creative class concept hardly needs introduction, neither in academic nor in urban...
This paper examines if residential self-selection can be observed in the population of the Greater D...
Fourteenth International Conference on Travel Behaviour Research, Windsor, United Kingdom, 15-20 Jul...
Dublin, like many other international cities has experienced a significant housing boom in the past ...
Societal ideas about home and domestic space are de eply inculcated. The familiarity, cultural ubiqu...
In recent city planning, references to the concepts of the so-called creative class and the creative...
Inspired by creative class theory, municipal policymakers across North America are focusing on urban...
Living in the countryside/rural areas has, in recent decades, become a matter of personal choice for...
This paper pinpoints the problematic use of grouping creative people as a social class. Observations...
The desire for 'vibrant', 'bohemian' neighbourhoods forms a focal point of the amenity preferences o...
The desire for ‘vibrant’, ‘bohemian’ neighbourhoods forms a focal point of the amenity preferences o...
The creative knowledge city has received considerable attention in the last number of years, not onl...
The creative class is a much-contested concept, yet still very much in vogue among policy makers. Al...
The idea of the creative knowledge city has received considerable attention in the last number of ye...
An examination of residential preferences for less sustainable housing Dr. Peter Howley*, Dr. Mark S...
Richard Florida's creative class concept hardly needs introduction, neither in academic nor in urban...
This paper examines if residential self-selection can be observed in the population of the Greater D...
Fourteenth International Conference on Travel Behaviour Research, Windsor, United Kingdom, 15-20 Jul...
Dublin, like many other international cities has experienced a significant housing boom in the past ...
Societal ideas about home and domestic space are de eply inculcated. The familiarity, cultural ubiqu...
In recent city planning, references to the concepts of the so-called creative class and the creative...
Inspired by creative class theory, municipal policymakers across North America are focusing on urban...
Living in the countryside/rural areas has, in recent decades, become a matter of personal choice for...
This paper pinpoints the problematic use of grouping creative people as a social class. Observations...