Food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy

Since 2007, the number of street food vendors in Austin, Texas has more than doubled. Food trucks in the urban environment have three fundamental roles. They are entrepreneurial start-ups, interim and mobile land uses, and cultural expressions. In these roles, street food vending particularly impact...

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Main Author: Howell, Alex Matthew
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/11902
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-119022015-09-20T17:00:38ZFood trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economyHowell, Alex MatthewFood trucksStreet foodInterim useMicroenterpriseCity planningAustin (Texas)Birmingham (Alabama)Small businessesConvenience foodsSince 2007, the number of street food vendors in Austin, Texas has more than doubled. Food trucks in the urban environment have three fundamental roles. They are entrepreneurial start-ups, interim and mobile land uses, and cultural expressions. In these roles, street food vending particularly impacts urban neighborhoods undergoing change. By occupying underutilized lots, activating streetscapes, promoting commercial activity and disseminating culture, mobile food vendors represent an innovative and low cost revitalization tool. In an effort to “catch-up” with the rapidly growing phenomenon, the City of Austin has had know choice but to implement policy and regulation reactively. By conducting in depth interviews and context analysis, this research attempts to answer the question: how might cities proactively leverage the beneficial impacts of mobile food vendors? The thesis culminates in a conceptual demonstration project for Birmingham, Alabama; a city on the cusp of a street food explosion.text2011-06-23T17:51:25Z2011-06-23T17:51:25Z2011-052011-06-23textelectronichttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/11902engCopyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Food trucks
Street food
Interim use
Microenterprise
City planning
Austin (Texas)
Birmingham (Alabama)
Small businesses
Convenience foods
spellingShingle Food trucks
Street food
Interim use
Microenterprise
City planning
Austin (Texas)
Birmingham (Alabama)
Small businesses
Convenience foods
Howell, Alex Matthew
Food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy
description Since 2007, the number of street food vendors in Austin, Texas has more than doubled. Food trucks in the urban environment have three fundamental roles. They are entrepreneurial start-ups, interim and mobile land uses, and cultural expressions. In these roles, street food vending particularly impacts urban neighborhoods undergoing change. By occupying underutilized lots, activating streetscapes, promoting commercial activity and disseminating culture, mobile food vendors represent an innovative and low cost revitalization tool. In an effort to “catch-up” with the rapidly growing phenomenon, the City of Austin has had know choice but to implement policy and regulation reactively. By conducting in depth interviews and context analysis, this research attempts to answer the question: how might cities proactively leverage the beneficial impacts of mobile food vendors? The thesis culminates in a conceptual demonstration project for Birmingham, Alabama; a city on the cusp of a street food explosion. === text
author Howell, Alex Matthew
author_facet Howell, Alex Matthew
author_sort Howell, Alex Matthew
title Food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy
title_short Food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy
title_full Food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy
title_fullStr Food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy
title_full_unstemmed Food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy
title_sort food trucks as urban revitalization catalysts : microenterprise, interim land use and the food economy
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/11902
work_keys_str_mv AT howellalexmatthew foodtrucksasurbanrevitalizationcatalystsmicroenterpriseinterimlanduseandthefoodeconomy
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