Title: WP2 Quality of Life Indicators
1WP2 Quality of Life Indicators
- Charles University of Prague
- Ludek Sykora
2WP2 Quality of Life Indicators
3Quality of Life the Concept
- SELMA proposal The QoL of the individual arising
from non-residential deconcentration - Quality of Life is a personal and therefore
subjective matter - Environmental (external to an individual) aspects
that contribute to a subjective perception of the
quality of life - Which aspects are formed and transformed by
non-residential deconcentration? - SELMA pays attention to socio-economic and
environmental aspects
4Socio-economic
- Spatial mismatch of employment
- Job opportnities
- Social polarisation, exclusion
- Community cohesion
- Costs of infrastructure provision
- Infrastructure accessibility
- Opportunity
5Environmental
- Noise
- Pollution
- Water quality
- Loss of open space
- Congestion (???)
6Structural or developmental view
- QoL situation link to the level of
deconcentration (structural) in the spatial
pattern - QoL change over 10 years link to the
deconcentration (structural / developmental) as a
change in spatial pattern - SELMA proposal promised indicators of change in
the quality of life !!! - Proposal combination of both approaches
7Spatial level
- Indicator for the whole metropolitan area
- Indicator for the zones in metropolitan area
(internal differentiation, relation between
compact city and suburbs) - Indicators for smaller spatial units
8Scale
- Metropolitan area (all cities)
- Zones in metropolitan areas (all cities)
- Smaller units within zones (in selected instances
all cities) - Grid (3 cities)
9Qualitative and quantitative approaches
- SELMA proposal promised a combination of both
qualitative and quantitative assessment - Qualitative - Case study (whole metropolitan area
or localities ??) - Aggregate data
- Efficiency and equity
103 cities versus all the others
- What is the difference in the level of analysis?
- What is the difference in the approach?
- 3 UrbanSim model, GIS, spatially detail data
11Question?
- SELMA proposal hypothesize that QoL impacts
arising from non-residential deconcentration will
be VERY DIFFERENT to those arising from
residential deconcentration - IMPLICATIONS SELMA does not study residential
deconcentration and thus can not prove this
hypothesis - Provided we take the hypothesis into account, the
traditional indicators are not very useful for
us. What is the alternative?
12SELMA WP 2
13Approach, Concepts and the Purpose of Indicators
- Main question How changes in land use patterns
caused by non-residential suburbanisation have
affected quality of life of individuals and
households in suburban areas and urban core of
metropolitan regions?
14Approach, Concepts and the Purpose of Indicators
- intensive research of mechanism through which
suburbanisation impacts on the quality of life - conceptualisation of mechanisms must precede any
assembly of large data sets and their statistical
analysis - we have to gather only such data and construct
indicators of quality of life that reflect the
impacts of non-residential suburbanisation
15Approach, Concepts and the Purpose of Indicators
- We have to start with a formulation of a scheme
that would reflect links between different land
use changes and changes of life of different
population sub-groups. gt common work for WP 2, 3
and 5 - Then we shall search for available indicators
that would best describe these impacts. gt WP 4
16The spatial scale and level of complexity of our
analysis
- aggregated data and extensive research
- case studies of places, non-residential
developments and inhabitants employing intensive
research techniques
17Spatial scales
- Metropolitan region as a whole (problem of
external boundary delimitation) - two zones in metropolitan region suburban zone
and urban core (compact city boundary) - more detailed spatial scale how large units in
terms of area and population size? (smallest
possible areas, in Prague ca 1000 units with
population ranging from 0-10000 inhabitants,
question for other metropolitan areas)
18Case studies
- impacts of particular non-residential
developments (out-of-town shopping and
entertainment zone logistic, warehousing and
distribution complex production facility in new
industrial zone) on the quality of life of
various population subgroups - intensive analysis can serve as a source of data
input to the model building, based on existing
factual relations rather than on statistical
relations generated by the comparison of
independent land use and independent quality of
life indicators
19Population sub-groups
- Who is benefiting from the use of the new
non-residential facilities? Who is negatively
affected by the use of these facilities? What is
the difference between various groups of
population in different places? - Several aspects of non-residential
suburbanisation affect every person. We have to
identify these aspects, analyse and assess them.
20Non-residential suburbanisation impacts research
- 1) on an individual, non-aggregated level, i.e.
aspect by aspect for each individual - 2) weighting of these individual aspects -gt a
more complex assessment for an individual
(inclusion only of the most important aspects) - 3) aggregation of individuals into
sub-populations according to activities in daily
life, place of living, socio-economic and
demographic status
21Quality of life impacts
- Â One suburban non-residential development impacts
on the quality of life of one individual in
several instances. This development impacts in
various combinations of these instances on
various people. We shall identify the most common
combinations of these effects (the number of
affected people). - One person is influenced by many new suburban
non-residential developments. We shall identify
the most common impacts from suburban projects
(in their mutual combination and complexity) on
one person. Then we have to aggregate the most
common combinations for population subgroups.
22Quality of life impacts
- the quality of daily life of individuals
- information can be obtained only by an intensive
research on the level of individual projects and
individual people - implications for research method questionnaire
survey of population and case studies of selected
typical developments
23What are the impacts of non-residential
suburbanisation
- on everyday life of people in
- metropolitan area
- suburban zone
- urban core
- Â
- immediate vicinity of non-residential development
24What are the impacts of non-residential
suburbanisation
- on basic activities of everyday life?
- Home/housing
- Work/school
- Services/shopping
- Leisure time
25What are the impacts of non-residential
suburbanisation
- on different population groups by socio-economic
and demographic/family status? - Wealthy
- Middle class
- Poor
26Focus on CHANGE
- We have to look on changes in land use and
changes in the quality of life. - Indicators must reflect the change.