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Exploring inequities in housing affordability through an analysis of walkability and house prices by neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 20:24 authored by Lucy GunnLucy Gunn, Tayebeh Saghapour, Billie Giles-CortiBillie Giles-Corti, Gavin TurrellGavin Turrell
Cities are socio-spatially patterned, yet few researchers have explored the association between walkability and house prices by neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage, highlighting issues about housing affordability, equity, and liveability. We aimed to determine whether walkability and house prices differed by neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage. To test this, we used linear regression models of house prices stratified by quintiles of neighbourhood socioeconomic disadvantage at the suburb level in metropolitan Melbourne, Australia on walkability and its components (street connectivity, dwelling density, and destination access), and public transit access. Walkability was positively associated with house prices. In the stratified regressions, destination accessibility was associated with higher house prices whilst having poor access to transit was negatively associated with house prices. The association between walkability and house prices was weakest for the most disadvantaged areas, suggesting that houses in these areas were more affordable due, in part, to a lack of amenity. Future planning could redress the relationship between walkability and house prices by making new areas walkable. Increasing densities in outer suburban areas would improve destination and transit access, and in established areas, inclusionary zoning policies could help ensure accessibility to social and affordable housing in amenity-rich areas redressing built environment inequities.

History

Journal

Cities and Health

Volume

6

Issue

3

Start page

616

End page

634

Total pages

19

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Inc.

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Former Identifier

2006116941

Esploro creation date

2022-11-10

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