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Three Challenges for the Compact City as a Sustainable Urban Form: Household Consumption of Energy and Transport in Eight Residential Areas in the Greater Oslo Region
503
Citations
13
References
2005
Year
Built EnvironmentHousingUrban GeographyGreater Oslo RegionLivabilityResidential DevelopmentSustainable CitiesRecent SurveySustainable Urban HousingUrban EconomicsUrban DevelopmentUrban EnergyUrban PlanningSustainable Urban FormCompact CitySocial SciencesUrban Environment
The results of a recent survey conducted in eight residential areas in the Greater Oslo Region support the hypothesis that there is a connection between land use characteristics and household consumption of energy and transport. Findings from the survey also lend great support to the compact city as a sustainable urban form. However, three distinct findings indicate that decentralised concentration could lead to even lower energy use in households: while the extent of everyday travel decreases in densely populated areas, the central urban areas represent the highest level of leisure-time travel by plane; the access to a private garden limits the extent of leisure travel; and, the difference in energy use for housing between single-family and multifamily housing is reduced in housing built after 1980, indicating that the established conclusions on the most energy-efficient housing should be questioned.
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