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- W4300635087 abstract "At a recent meeting in the Danish Ministry of Housing and Building, the development of spatial social indicators in connection with the surveillance of different housing estates and town sectors was discussed. After having debated different income groups, age profiles, business conditions, etc, one of the participants stated that in his opinion the best indicator was the make of cars in a parking lot on an ordinary evening. A housing area with a lot of old, rusty, worn-down Ladas and Skodas and a few (if any) BMWs was a sure sign of a problematic area. Although we, at the Danish Building Research Institute, have, for many years, researched into the development and solution of problems in housing areas we have, however, not applied this indicator. But I think that he is right – during our research work it has been easy to see whether one was in a well-functioning part of town or in an area with social problems. It is not only the parked cars that make an impression, but also the appearance of the houses, the degree of wear and tear, the conditions of the windows, the amount of garbage, the surface of the roads – all these physical features clearly indicate the socioeconomic conditions inside the houses as well as among the people moving about the neighbourhood. The first realisation is that there is a connection between the social condition of a housing area and the physical appearance of a neighbourhood. In what follows I will summarise the connection between these social and physical aspects, based on research into social exclusion over the last decade and reconstruction attempts in different housing areas. Furthermore, I would like to discuss which indicators are capable of representing these processes and their results." @default.
- W4300635087 created "2022-10-03" @default.
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- W4300635087 date "1995-11-01" @default.
- W4300635087 modified "2023-10-16" @default.
- W4300635087 title "Social exclusion and spatial stress: the connections" @default.
- W4300635087 doi "https://doi.org/10.51952/9781447366577.ch008" @default.
- W4300635087 hasPublicationYear "1995" @default.
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