Neighborhood green and services diversity effects on land prices: Evidence from a multilevel hedonic analysis in Luxembourg

•First multilevel hedonic model with landscape amenities and neighbourhood services.•Opposite effects of landscape diversity at different distances.•Spatial heterogeneity effects in the valuation of local land-use diversity.•No impact of services diversity at sub-municipal scale.•Multilevel model ca...

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Veröffentlicht in:Landscape and urban planning 2015-11, Vol.143, p.100-111
Hauptverfasser: Glaesener, Marie-Line, Caruso, Geoffrey
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container_title Landscape and urban planning
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creator Glaesener, Marie-Line
Caruso, Geoffrey
description •First multilevel hedonic model with landscape amenities and neighbourhood services.•Opposite effects of landscape diversity at different distances.•Spatial heterogeneity effects in the valuation of local land-use diversity.•No impact of services diversity at sub-municipal scale.•Multilevel model captures context effects and spatial autocorrelation. The article aims at revealing the role of green space diversity and the mix of neighborhood services on the price of residential land in Luxembourg. We use a multilevel approach to estimate a hedonic model in order to benefit from the hierarchical structure of the data and to reveal spatial heterogeneity in the valuation of these neighborhood qualities. In addition to standard accessibility and socio-economic variables, we include geographical variables in the form of neighborhood mix indices and a Shannon diversity index of land-uses. Via a spatial cross-regressive specification we also test whether our nested levels are able to capture most of the spatial dependence. Our results show that the presence of a mix of services and green space does not directly impact prices, but that the diversity of land-uses (Shannon index) matters, and has negative effects when considered within immediate proximity and positive effects within a walking distance. Land use effects however vary spatially and emphasize the contrast between regions that are particularly attractive and picturesque, and the former industrial conurbation. In our case we also show the ability of the multilevel approach to capture spatial auto-correlation effects.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2015.06.008
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The article aims at revealing the role of green space diversity and the mix of neighborhood services on the price of residential land in Luxembourg. We use a multilevel approach to estimate a hedonic model in order to benefit from the hierarchical structure of the data and to reveal spatial heterogeneity in the valuation of these neighborhood qualities. In addition to standard accessibility and socio-economic variables, we include geographical variables in the form of neighborhood mix indices and a Shannon diversity index of land-uses. Via a spatial cross-regressive specification we also test whether our nested levels are able to capture most of the spatial dependence. Our results show that the presence of a mix of services and green space does not directly impact prices, but that the diversity of land-uses (Shannon index) matters, and has negative effects when considered within immediate proximity and positive effects within a walking distance. 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subjects Accessibility
Autocorrelation
Cross-regressive model
Hedonic pricing
Heterogeneity
Land
Land use
Land-use diversity
Mathematical models
Multilevel
Multilevel approach
Neighborhood amenities
Specifications
title Neighborhood green and services diversity effects on land prices: Evidence from a multilevel hedonic analysis in Luxembourg
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