Publication | Open Access
EMPIRICAL POLYCENTRICITY: THE COMPLEX RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EMPLOYMENT CENTERS
23
Citations
16
References
2015
Year
Local Economic DevelopmentHuman Resource ManagementSocial SciencesLabour GeographyManagementEconomic AnalysisRegional ScienceUrban Freight DistributionEconomicsUnemploymentCentral Business DistrictWorkforce ProductivityUrban Economic DevelopmentRegional EconomicsUrban PlanningEmployment SubcentersLabor EconomicsAgglomeration EconomicsEmpirical PolycentricityChanging WorkforceUrban GeographySpatial EconomicsPolycentric CityUrban EconomicsBusinessUrban Space
ABSTRACT Our paper empirically demonstrates that employment subcenters in large urban areas have important economic relationships with each other, and not solely with the central business district (CBD). Using data from Houston, Texas, we estimate polycentric density functions and show that “total” gradients differ from gradients using only own‐center coefficients. We model asymmetry by showing density is very different for centers with overlapping areas of influence. We conclude that subcenters have important yet heterogeneous linkages to each other in addition to the CBD, and that therefore the polycentric city is more complex than simply having additional centers mimicking the CBD.
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