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Growth and Change, 2016
AbstractThis essay defines walkable neighborhood systems, summarizes the negative impacts of suburbia on the economy as a whole, and presents indirect pricing as a major cause of suburbia. The paper proposes several pricing reforms and green mobility as solutions based on prices that reflect full costs.
Sherman L. Lewis, Kris Adhikari
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AbstractThis essay defines walkable neighborhood systems, summarizes the negative impacts of suburbia on the economy as a whole, and presents indirect pricing as a major cause of suburbia. The paper proposes several pricing reforms and green mobility as solutions based on prices that reflect full costs.
Sherman L. Lewis, Kris Adhikari
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In urban studies, walkability generally refers to the capacity to walk as enabled or constrained by the built, social, and natural environment, but definitions have varied over time, between disciplines and authors. While cities have been built for walking for thousands of years, “walkability” only emerged as a common term around the 1990s.
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Culture and Walkability: Ethnicity, Neighborhood Walkability, and House Price
The Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, 2023Debanjana Dey +3 more
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