How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to Relocate

This paper investigates whether various forms of green spaces in the residential environment are associated with city dwellers’ life satisfaction and their willingness to relocate. Previous research on different forms of green spaces in the residential environment as a direct source of life satisfac...

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Main Authors: Stefanie Kley, Tetiana Dovbishchuk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/7/3984
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spelling doaj-8ce6d598636b4b73938d2bf9afbac8de2021-04-02T23:06:58ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-04-01133984398410.3390/su13073984How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to RelocateStefanie Kley0Tetiana Dovbishchuk1Department of Social Sciences, Faculty of Business, Economics and Social Sciences, Universität Hamburg, 20146 Hamburg, GermanyDepartment of Social Sciences, Faculty of Business, Economics and Social Sciences, Universität Hamburg, 20146 Hamburg, GermanyThis paper investigates whether various forms of green spaces in the residential environment are associated with city dwellers’ life satisfaction and their willingness to relocate. Previous research on different forms of green spaces in the residential environment as a direct source of life satisfaction is scarce, and we know little about whether green spaces affect the decision to relocate. We address these topics with a two-equation model that estimates respondents’ considerations to relocate while accounting for life satisfaction. With this strategy, we are able to test which aspects of residential greenery (window view, green environment, green yard, own garden, and balcony) are associated with one or both outcomes, controlling for life-course events and demographic characteristics. The data come from a primary survey conducted in two large German cities, Cologne and Hamburg, in 2020/21 (<i>N</i> = 1886). The results show that not having green elements in the window view, not having a green yard, and—exclusively for parents—not having a garden increase the likelihood of considering residential relocation. Not having a balcony and not having a garden are directly associated with decreased life satisfaction, and decreased life satisfaction triggers the willingness to relocate.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/7/3984citiesgreen spaceshealthlife satisfactionlife-coursemigration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stefanie Kley
Tetiana Dovbishchuk
spellingShingle Stefanie Kley
Tetiana Dovbishchuk
How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to Relocate
Sustainability
cities
green spaces
health
life satisfaction
life-course
migration
author_facet Stefanie Kley
Tetiana Dovbishchuk
author_sort Stefanie Kley
title How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to Relocate
title_short How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to Relocate
title_full How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to Relocate
title_fullStr How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to Relocate
title_full_unstemmed How a Lack of Green in the Residential Environment Lowers the Life Satisfaction of City Dwellers and Increases Their Willingness to Relocate
title_sort how a lack of green in the residential environment lowers the life satisfaction of city dwellers and increases their willingness to relocate
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-04-01
description This paper investigates whether various forms of green spaces in the residential environment are associated with city dwellers’ life satisfaction and their willingness to relocate. Previous research on different forms of green spaces in the residential environment as a direct source of life satisfaction is scarce, and we know little about whether green spaces affect the decision to relocate. We address these topics with a two-equation model that estimates respondents’ considerations to relocate while accounting for life satisfaction. With this strategy, we are able to test which aspects of residential greenery (window view, green environment, green yard, own garden, and balcony) are associated with one or both outcomes, controlling for life-course events and demographic characteristics. The data come from a primary survey conducted in two large German cities, Cologne and Hamburg, in 2020/21 (<i>N</i> = 1886). The results show that not having green elements in the window view, not having a green yard, and—exclusively for parents—not having a garden increase the likelihood of considering residential relocation. Not having a balcony and not having a garden are directly associated with decreased life satisfaction, and decreased life satisfaction triggers the willingness to relocate.
topic cities
green spaces
health
life satisfaction
life-course
migration
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/7/3984
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