A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space

Due to a variety of economic pressures, medium-density housing forms, particularly the townhouse, have become increasingly popular alternatives to detached housing. The design of the communal and private outdoor space in townhouse projects has been criticized for a lack of space and privacy. The obj...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Greig, Barbara Jean
Language:English
Published: 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/22105
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-22105
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-221052018-01-05T17:41:29Z A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space Greig, Barbara Jean Due to a variety of economic pressures, medium-density housing forms, particularly the townhouse, have become increasingly popular alternatives to detached housing. The design of the communal and private outdoor space in townhouse projects has been criticized for a lack of space and privacy. The objectives of this study were to describe townhouse owners, determine their satisfaction with the project and the size, privacy, and design of back yards, and test whether their evaluations could be predicted from their demographic characteristics, housing background, or their attitudes about housing and the use and design of outdoor space. To satisfy these objectives, interviews were conducted with ninety owners in nine townhouse projects located in the Greater Vancouver area of B.C. The projects were randomly selected from eligible projects in four municipalities and respondents were selected by interviewing residents found at home during the week or on weekends. Factor analysis, cluster analysis, and regression analysis were used to test for predictors of satisfaction. The townhouse owners represented a broad range of ages, incomes, family sizes, and housing backgrounds. Overall satisfaction with the projects and yards was high, and the majority rated privacy as adequate. Regression analysis predicted 25% of the variance in general ratings, 20% of the variance in privacy ratings, and 20% of the variance in ratings of social problems in the projects. All three rating measures were predicted by regressions significant at p=.10. The most useful predictors included the reasons people were living in townhouses, their attitudes about family use of the back yard, and what kind of housing they had lived in. Based on the findings, recommendations were made for the size of yards and patios, privacy fencing, paving materials, lawns, plantings, general site design, and management. Land and Food Systems, Faculty of Graduate 2010-03-18T19:01:59Z 2010-03-18T19:01:59Z 1980 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/22105 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Due to a variety of economic pressures, medium-density housing forms, particularly the townhouse, have become increasingly popular alternatives to detached housing. The design of the communal and private outdoor space in townhouse projects has been criticized for a lack of space and privacy. The objectives of this study were to describe townhouse owners, determine their satisfaction with the project and the size, privacy, and design of back yards, and test whether their evaluations could be predicted from their demographic characteristics, housing background, or their attitudes about housing and the use and design of outdoor space. To satisfy these objectives, interviews were conducted with ninety owners in nine townhouse projects located in the Greater Vancouver area of B.C. The projects were randomly selected from eligible projects in four municipalities and respondents were selected by interviewing residents found at home during the week or on weekends. Factor analysis, cluster analysis, and regression analysis were used to test for predictors of satisfaction. The townhouse owners represented a broad range of ages, incomes, family sizes, and housing backgrounds. Overall satisfaction with the projects and yards was high, and the majority rated privacy as adequate. Regression analysis predicted 25% of the variance in general ratings, 20% of the variance in privacy ratings, and 20% of the variance in ratings of social problems in the projects. All three rating measures were predicted by regressions significant at p=.10. The most useful predictors included the reasons people were living in townhouses, their attitudes about family use of the back yard, and what kind of housing they had lived in. Based on the findings, recommendations were made for the size of yards and patios, privacy fencing, paving materials, lawns, plantings, general site design, and management. === Land and Food Systems, Faculty of === Graduate
author Greig, Barbara Jean
spellingShingle Greig, Barbara Jean
A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space
author_facet Greig, Barbara Jean
author_sort Greig, Barbara Jean
title A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space
title_short A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space
title_full A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space
title_fullStr A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space
title_full_unstemmed A survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space
title_sort survey of townhouse owners' preferences for private outdoor space
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/22105
work_keys_str_mv AT greigbarbarajean asurveyoftownhouseownerspreferencesforprivateoutdoorspace
AT greigbarbarajean surveyoftownhouseownerspreferencesforprivateoutdoorspace
_version_ 1718591917690716160