I see that the Barclay's Capital Report suggesting that skyscrapers are linked with financial crashes has attraced a lot of coverage. Just as with city rankings it's a little hard to know what to make of these type of reports. Being generous, they at least provide food for thought
Taking as our focus the city of London over the last decade, we use state-held records of house sale...
Globalization’s need for global cities with highly concentrated financial districts is discussed to ...
This article problematizes the relationship between the global super‐rich and processes of property ...
Posted by Max Nathan, SERC and LSE Cities Like many cities, London is having a skyscraper phase at t...
In spite of the global recession, London and many other large cities are experiencing a major period...
Buildings taller than 200 meters have been built since 1909, and since then, over 1500 have been bui...
Real estate booms have regularly occurred throughout the world, leaving painful busts and financial ...
The latest figures showing London house prices up 17% in a year can only fuel speculation about whet...
Large swings in real estate prices that end in devastating crashes have been witnessed by many count...
This paper studies the contribution of real estate bubble to a financial crisis. First, we document ...
With the collapse of subprime mortgages in 2007 and the failure of Lehman Brothers in 2008, the glob...
In an article in the New York Times on 5 February 2011, entitled ‘Housing Bubbles Are Few and Far Be...
The most recent American Economic Review has a set of interesting papers on 'Very Local House Price ...
Few would dispute that we are in a tall building boom unprecedented in terms of its global scale, wi...
How can we develop a political critique of urban form at the time of a tall building boom? Pointing ...
Taking as our focus the city of London over the last decade, we use state-held records of house sale...
Globalization’s need for global cities with highly concentrated financial districts is discussed to ...
This article problematizes the relationship between the global super‐rich and processes of property ...
Posted by Max Nathan, SERC and LSE Cities Like many cities, London is having a skyscraper phase at t...
In spite of the global recession, London and many other large cities are experiencing a major period...
Buildings taller than 200 meters have been built since 1909, and since then, over 1500 have been bui...
Real estate booms have regularly occurred throughout the world, leaving painful busts and financial ...
The latest figures showing London house prices up 17% in a year can only fuel speculation about whet...
Large swings in real estate prices that end in devastating crashes have been witnessed by many count...
This paper studies the contribution of real estate bubble to a financial crisis. First, we document ...
With the collapse of subprime mortgages in 2007 and the failure of Lehman Brothers in 2008, the glob...
In an article in the New York Times on 5 February 2011, entitled ‘Housing Bubbles Are Few and Far Be...
The most recent American Economic Review has a set of interesting papers on 'Very Local House Price ...
Few would dispute that we are in a tall building boom unprecedented in terms of its global scale, wi...
How can we develop a political critique of urban form at the time of a tall building boom? Pointing ...
Taking as our focus the city of London over the last decade, we use state-held records of house sale...
Globalization’s need for global cities with highly concentrated financial districts is discussed to ...
This article problematizes the relationship between the global super‐rich and processes of property ...