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Explore how designating open space affects residential development locations and rates, assessing management strategies' impact. Case study in Boulder County, Colorado, using econometric modeling and historical data. Discussing factors influencing development decisions and potential study improvements.
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Open space and land market feedbacks Megan Lawson University of Colorado-Boulder August 7, 2008
Research Question • Primary question: • Does the establishment of open space affect the rate and location of residential development? • Secondary question: • Do open space management strategies alter these patterns?
The problem, in a nutshell • Designating open space turns undeveloped land into a permanent amenity • If individuals prefer permanent open space to developed or temporarily undeveloped land, development will cluster around the designated open space • Two problems with this: • Designating open space in areas further from the city center could exacerbate sprawl • “Edge effects” from development may degrade the habitat preserved by open space (Armsworth, 2006)
Existing Literature • People value open space: • Correll, Lilydahl, and Singell (Land, 1978) • Irwin (Land, 2002)
Existing Literature • People value open space: • Correll, Lilydahl, and Singell (Land, 1978) • Irwin (Land, 2002) • People who value open space locate near it: • Turner (JUE, 2005): theoretical model of preferences for open space • Irwin and Bockstael (Reg. Sci. and Urb. Econ., 2004): how open space affects the rate and pattern of subdivision in Maryland
This paper’s contribution • Modeling development decisions at the individual parcel level • Including public open space • Evaluating the effect that various management options have on development patterns • Easement versus fee ownership • Publicly versus privately held • Open versus restricted access • Endogenous open space decisions • Open space only established where there is a threat, often development pressure • Causal effects may be overstated
Case Study: Boulder County, Colorado • Long history of open space preservation: • Chautauqua, 1875 • Sales tax specifically for open space purchase, 1967 • Aggressive open space purchasing began, 1989 • Currently over 65% of the land in Boulder County is permanently protected
Data • Parcel and subdivision data from the Boulder County Land Use and Assessor’s Departments • 80,000 parcels and 3,500 subdivisions • Zoning data from Boulder County GIS Department • Open space data from COMap • Used GIS to calculate the percentage of a buffer around each parcel comprised of public access open space, over time
The Econometric Model • Proportional Hazard Model: • Time varying covariate: percentage of land within 0.10 miles comprised of open space • Time-invariant covariates: • Slope • Elevation • Zoning • Municipality indicators • Parcel size • Indicator for located within any city limits • Cost distance to Boulder city center • Adjacent parcel development status at time of development
Next steps • Improved measure of adjacent parcel development status • Controlling for spatial autocorrelation • Additional buffer sizes and management options • Analysis for subdivisions • Controlling for endogenous relationships