In North America the housebuilding industry is ubiquitous and locally autonomous. In Ontario during the 1990s, 81% of urban single-family homes were erected by locally based builders, a proportion that varied with urban isolation. Urban areas may be regarded as the industrial districts of home builders: numerous small, specialized firms interact frequently within a rich, embedded market network; subcontracting is the norm; networks and firm boundaries are fluid. The theory of industrial districts offers a useful vocabulary for analysing the neglected building industry. Analytically, the building industry offers unequalled opportunities to explore the dynamics of industrial districts, and how economic globalization meets local limits
The indispensable relationship between city and economy often remains incomprehensible and rather co...
The form and role of small-scale industry in the urban scene has been almost universally ignored - b...
Efforts in US cities to support the emergence of the “maker economy” could take urban-level industri...
In North America the housebuilding industry is ubiquitous and locally autonomous. In Ontario during ...
In North America the housebuilding industry is ubiquitous and locally autonomous. In Ontario during ...
The North American housebuilding industry is central to the production ofurban space and the provisi...
This paper is concerned with the regional firm-size structure of housebuilding in Canada based on a ...
The major objectives of the study are to determine the nature of the housebuilding industry in Metro...
ABSTRACT The North American housebuilding industry has been neglected in urban and housing studies. ...
Buzzelli M. (2005) What explains firm transience in house-building? A regional analysis of Ontario, ...
The North American housebuilding industry has been neglected in urban and housing studies. Its firm ...
In this paper I document and analyse the evolving firm size structure of the housebuilding industry ...
An analysis of the spatial choice of housing builders in the greater Toronto area (GTA), Canada, is ...
The most undesirable side-effect of the Industrial Revolution was the blighting of the surrounding r...
This paper presents an analysis of the spatial choice of housing builders in the Greater Toronto Are...
The indispensable relationship between city and economy often remains incomprehensible and rather co...
The form and role of small-scale industry in the urban scene has been almost universally ignored - b...
Efforts in US cities to support the emergence of the “maker economy” could take urban-level industri...
In North America the housebuilding industry is ubiquitous and locally autonomous. In Ontario during ...
In North America the housebuilding industry is ubiquitous and locally autonomous. In Ontario during ...
The North American housebuilding industry is central to the production ofurban space and the provisi...
This paper is concerned with the regional firm-size structure of housebuilding in Canada based on a ...
The major objectives of the study are to determine the nature of the housebuilding industry in Metro...
ABSTRACT The North American housebuilding industry has been neglected in urban and housing studies. ...
Buzzelli M. (2005) What explains firm transience in house-building? A regional analysis of Ontario, ...
The North American housebuilding industry has been neglected in urban and housing studies. Its firm ...
In this paper I document and analyse the evolving firm size structure of the housebuilding industry ...
An analysis of the spatial choice of housing builders in the greater Toronto area (GTA), Canada, is ...
The most undesirable side-effect of the Industrial Revolution was the blighting of the surrounding r...
This paper presents an analysis of the spatial choice of housing builders in the Greater Toronto Are...
The indispensable relationship between city and economy often remains incomprehensible and rather co...
The form and role of small-scale industry in the urban scene has been almost universally ignored - b...
Efforts in US cities to support the emergence of the “maker economy” could take urban-level industri...