Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society

It is widely recognized that cities nowadays are confronted with (new) challenges like segregation and suburbanisation. This paper explores the idea that these processes are related with residential choices (or preferences) made by residents with divergent lifestyles and value patterns. The paper fo...

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Main Authors: Ann Pisman, Georges Allaert, Piet Lombaerde
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Société Royale Belge de Géographie and the Belgian National Committee of Geography 2011-09-01
Series:Belgeo
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/belgeo/6394
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spelling doaj-b4d5ea8eb21e4707b616820d908de6802021-03-02T11:11:39ZengSociété Royale Belge de Géographie and the Belgian National Committee of GeographyBelgeo1377-23682294-91352011-09-0118910410.4000/belgeo.6394Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized societyAnn PismanGeorges AllaertPiet LombaerdeIt is widely recognized that cities nowadays are confronted with (new) challenges like segregation and suburbanisation. This paper explores the idea that these processes are related with residential choices (or preferences) made by residents with divergent lifestyles and value patterns. The paper focuses on differences between urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences. Firstly the concept of lifestyles in general, and urban and suburban lifestyles more specifically, are approached. Secondly the results of a quantitative survey amongst residents within four neighbourhoods in the Ghent Region, a city in Belgium, are presented. This survey confirms that residents of urban and suburban zones have divergent lifestyles, but only for behavioural aspects, such as : private property protection, status behaviour and ecological behaviour. This results however in a social-spatial inequality and polarization between the urban centres and the suburban fringe. The shared aims amongst urban as well as suburban residents for a more secure residential environment and the ideal of the detached single-family house with private garden situated within a purely residential area, were identified as drivers for future suburban migrations. These residential preferences might cause (further) suburbanisation but do not need to lead to segregated social communities, since living with peers does not seem to be a driver for migration in Flanders, Belgium.http://journals.openedition.org/belgeo/6394lifestyle preferencesBelgiumFlandersGhentsuburbanization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ann Pisman
Georges Allaert
Piet Lombaerde
spellingShingle Ann Pisman
Georges Allaert
Piet Lombaerde
Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society
Belgeo
lifestyle preferences
Belgium
Flanders
Ghent
suburbanization
author_facet Ann Pisman
Georges Allaert
Piet Lombaerde
author_sort Ann Pisman
title Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society
title_short Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society
title_full Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society
title_fullStr Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society
title_full_unstemmed Urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society
title_sort urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences in a highly urbanized society
publisher Société Royale Belge de Géographie and the Belgian National Committee of Geography
series Belgeo
issn 1377-2368
2294-9135
publishDate 2011-09-01
description It is widely recognized that cities nowadays are confronted with (new) challenges like segregation and suburbanisation. This paper explores the idea that these processes are related with residential choices (or preferences) made by residents with divergent lifestyles and value patterns. The paper focuses on differences between urban and suburban lifestyles and residential preferences. Firstly the concept of lifestyles in general, and urban and suburban lifestyles more specifically, are approached. Secondly the results of a quantitative survey amongst residents within four neighbourhoods in the Ghent Region, a city in Belgium, are presented. This survey confirms that residents of urban and suburban zones have divergent lifestyles, but only for behavioural aspects, such as : private property protection, status behaviour and ecological behaviour. This results however in a social-spatial inequality and polarization between the urban centres and the suburban fringe. The shared aims amongst urban as well as suburban residents for a more secure residential environment and the ideal of the detached single-family house with private garden situated within a purely residential area, were identified as drivers for future suburban migrations. These residential preferences might cause (further) suburbanisation but do not need to lead to segregated social communities, since living with peers does not seem to be a driver for migration in Flanders, Belgium.
topic lifestyle preferences
Belgium
Flanders
Ghent
suburbanization
url http://journals.openedition.org/belgeo/6394
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AT pietlombaerde urbanandsuburbanlifestylesandresidentialpreferencesinahighlyurbanizedsociety
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