The extent and determinants of dissonance between actual and preferred residential neighborhood type
Publication date
2004
Authors
Schwanen, T.
Mokhtarian, P.L.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
DOI
Document Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
(c)UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2004
Abstract
Although households' general preference for low-density residential environments is well
documented in the literature, little research in geography and urban planning has explicitly inves-
tigated how many and which households experience a state of mismatch in terms of land-use patterns
between their preferred residential neighborhood type and the type of neighborhood where they
currently reside. Using data from 1358 commuters living in three communities in the San Francisco
Bay Area, in this study we find that nearly a quarter of the residents live in a neighborhood type that
does not match their land-use related preferences. The results of an investigation of the determinants
of such dissonance are consistent with existing knowledge about residential preferences. It is shown
that single suburban dwellers and large households and families in the city are more likely to be
mismatched, or experience higher levels of mismatch in terms of neighborhood type. Further, the
extent of mismatch is clearly related to automobile orientation, as well as to lifestyles and personality
traits. The results suggest that policies aiming to attract a diverse market to neotraditional, high-
density neighborhoods may not be as effective as decisionmakers and planners hope. If a broad range
of households is artificially attracted to such new developments (for example, through providing
financial advantages or other policy incentives), this might on average result in lower levels of
residential satisfaction, higher residential mobility, lower sense of community, and enduring auto
dependency. On the other hand, it is encouraging to see that there is also a substantial proportion
of suburban dwellers preferring high-density environments. Relaxation of land-use laws in existing
suburban communities might be successful in reducing residential neighborhood type dissonance for
these types of suburban dwellers, but perhaps at the cost of increasing dissonance for the suburban-
ites preferring lower densities. It would be valuable to investigate whether there is a mix of densities
and uses that would optimally satisfy both types of preferences