Managing and Prioritizing Investments in Urban Waterways: Empirical Insights Into the Preferences of the Public and Experts

Author:

Cooper Bethany1ORCID,Burton Michael2ORCID,Crase Lin1ORCID,Rigby Daniel3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UniSA Business University of South Australia Adelaide SA Australia

2. School of Agriculture and Environment University of Western Australia Perth WA Australia

3. School of Social Sciences University of Manchester Manchester UK

Abstract

AbstractThe world is more urbanized now than ever before and maintaining some form of amenity from natural or modified ecosystems in the urban context is an increasingly significant challenge. This is not aided by the somewhat amorphous definition of amenity itself. This article introduces a framework for conceptualizing the amenity of urban waterways and provides empirical evidence about the relative weight of the different determinants of waterway amenity. We use best‐worst scaling to examine how households rate the relative importance of the amenity attributes along with data about how households rate their “connection” to waterways. Comparisons of preferences are made across four cities in Australia, all ranked in the top 10 most liveable cities in the World in 2021. The study also captures the relative importance of how “experts” in the field perceive these attributes. We find evidence that public preferences are not always aligned with those of experts and uncover significant heterogeneity within household respondents. To illustrate one way to cater for this heterogeneity in urban planning we report the results of a total unduplicated reach and frequency analysis as a means of identifying an efficacious portfolio of interventions. Accordingly, the study provides useful insights for waterway managers seeking to improve the allocation of resources and generate the most efficient amenity outcomes.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Reference54 articles.

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2. Australian Bureau of Statistics. (2022).Statistics about the population and components of change (births deaths migration) for Australia's capital cities and regions. Retrieved fromhttps://www.abs.gov.au/statistics/people/population/regional‐population/latest‐release

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