Measuring Residential Satisfaction in Historic Areas Using Actual–Aspiration Gap Theory: The Case of Famagusta, Northern Cyprus
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- How do the residential environment, local historical housing renovation rules, and SOP pillars impact RS?
- How do the sub-pillars of the residential environment and SOP pillars impact RS?
- How do the components of the residential environment, local historical housing renovation rules, and SOP pillars impact RS?
2. Literature Review
3. Conceptualization
3.1. Determinants of RS
3.1.1. Socio-Demographic Characteristics
3.1.2. Residential Environment
- Neighborhood facilities [9];
- Environmental features of housing [65];
- Social environment [44];
- Housing conditions [64];
- Housing features [40];
- Housing support services [2].
3.1.3. Local Historical Housing Renovation Rules
3.1.4. Sense of Place (SOP)
Definition of SOP
Linkage between SOP and RS
3.2. A Conceptual Framework of RS
4. Model and Methodology
4.1. Study Area
4.2. Data Collection and Methodology
4.3. Descriptive Analysis
4.4. Econometrical Test Models
5. Empirical Results
Estimation Results
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Summary of Existing Literature on RS and Questionnaire
Authors | Case Studies | Selected Factors | Findings |
---|---|---|---|
[69] | Households sampled (Wooster, Ohio) | Context of dwelling and neighborhood, characteristics of households. | Characteristics of households and contextual characteristics of the dwellings and neighborhood have significant effect on residential satisfaction. |
[64] | Public housing units (Abuja, Nigeria) | Structure types, building features, housing condition, neighborhood facilities, public housing management. | Residents are dissatisfied with all the factors except for the neighborhood facilities. |
[17] | Modern and old neighborhood (Edirne, Turkey) | Perceived living conditions, physical surrounding, social relations, local authorities, quality of the facilities. | Perceived attitude toward residential satisfaction with social relations, and the local authorities are relatively higher in a modern neighborhood. |
[65] | Mass housing areas (Istanbul, Turkey) | Accessibility, inhabited residential environment, various facilities in the inhabited environment, environmental security, neighbor relationships, appearance of housing environment. | Accessibility to open areas is statistically significant with positive signs and has the highest impact on housing and environmental quality satisfaction. |
[20] | Private low-cost housing (Terengganu, Malaysia) | Dwelling unit features, housing services, neighborhood facilities and environment. | Degrees of residential satisfaction are higher with dwelling units and services provided by the developers than neighborhood facilities and environment. |
[22] | Neighborhoods (Prenestino-Labicano, Torre Angela, Rome) | Physical attributes of the environment, cognitive perceptions and affective appraisals of residents, urban activities, socio-demographic. | Cognitive, affective, and urban activities are significant predictors of residential satisfaction. |
[44] | Newly designed public low-cost housing (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) | Dwelling unit features, dwelling unit support services, public facilities, social environment, neighborhood facilities. | Residents moderately satisfied with neighborhood facilities, support services, and public facilities more than dwelling unit features and social environment. |
[18] | Planned community (Elenbrook, Western Australia) | Sense of community, sense of belonging, and sense of place. | Sense of community, sense of belonging, and sense of place have a positive nexus with residential satisfaction. |
[40] | Public housing (Ogun, Nigeria) | Dwelling unit features, dwelling unit support services, neighborhood environment, management of housing estates, housing acquisition process, social environment. | Level of residential satisfaction is comparatively higher with dwelling unit features than neighborhood facilities and services and respondents are dissatisfied with the housing conditions. |
[8] | Public core housing (Abeokuta, Ogun State, Nigeria) | Socio-economic characteristics, housing unit characteristics, neighborhood facilities and environment, management and services. | Socio-economic characteristics, housing unit characteristics, neighborhood facilities and environment, management and services are significant predictors of residential satisfaction. |
[66] | Squatter houses, and apartment buildings (Dikmen, Ankara) | Architectural features, interior and economic features of the house, functionality and location of the house, and social features of the housing environment. | Housing satisfaction is a multidimensional phenomenon containing physical, social and economic dimensions. |
[15] | Public housing (Hangzhou, China) | Housing characteristic, neighborhood characteristic, public facilities, social environment, residence comparison, housing allocation scheme, residents’ characteristics. | Neighborhood characteristic, public facilities, housing characteristics, public housing allocation scheme, socio-economic, and residence comparison factors impact on residential satisfaction. |
[9] | Double-storey terrace housing (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) | Public facilities, social environment, neighborhood facilities, housing support services, physical features. | Improvements of housing design and neighborhood elements can significantly enhance the residents’ overall housing satisfaction. |
[25] | Public housing (Shiraz, Iran) | Physical features, public facilities, public services, social participation and cohesion. | Physical features variable is the main determinants of overall residential satisfaction. |
[19] | Public housing (Tehran, Iran) | Place identity, place dependence, place attachment (sense of place components). | Sense of place components are positive predictive factors for residential satisfaction. |
A: Place identity | ||||
Everything about my residential area (Walled city) is a reflection of me. | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
My residential area (walled city) says very little about who I am. | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
I feel that I can really be myself at my residential area (Walled city). | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
My residential area (Walled city) reflects the type of person I am. | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
B: Place attachment | ||||
I feel relaxed when I’m at my residential area (Walled city). | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
I feel happiest when I’m at my residential area (Walled city). | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
My residential area (Walled city) is my favorite place to be | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
I really miss my residential area (Walled city) when I’m away from it for too long. | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
C: Place dependence | ||||
My residential area (Walled city) is the best place for doing the things that I enjoy most. | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
For doing the things that I enjoy most, no other place can compare to my residential area (Walled city). | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
My residential area (Walled city) is not a good place to do the things I most like to do. | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
As far as I am concerned, there are better places to be than at my residential area (Walled city). | ||||
Strongly disagree | Disagree | Do not know | Agree | Strongly agree |
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Pillar | Sub-Pillar | Components | Source |
---|---|---|---|
Socio-demographic characteristics | -------- | Gender; Age; Monthly income; Home ownership; Length of residency; Ethnicity; Household size; Marital status; Education, Employment sector; Number of bedrooms | [8,9,24,25,38,44,64] |
Residential environment | Neighborhood facilities: (Accessibility to function area and public facilities) | Accessibility to centrality (shopping center, city center (Namik Kemal Square, Salamis Road), Job, market); Accessibility to education (kindergarten, primary schools, high schools); Accessibility to open areas (public and private parking areas, walking areas, sport center, green space and views, sea); Accessibility to health center; Accessibility to public transport (bus, taxi); Accessibility to public facilities (Park, place of worship, police station, firefighting station, bank, recreational areas, closed sport center) | [9,15,20,44,63,65] |
Environmental features | Maintenance of the environment (open areas, green areas); Night lighting; Traffic density; Cleanliness | [1,65] | |
Social environment | Neighborhood relations; Community cohesion/relations; Level of crime; Level of security; Noise | [15,44] | |
Housing conditions | Water pressure; Quality of doors; Quality of floors; Quality of walls; Quality of windows; Quality of interior painting; Quality of exterior painting; Lighting of stairwell | [64] | |
Housing features | Design/layout of the interior space; Design of bath and toilet; Location and size (living room, kitchen, bathroom, toilet); Number (bedroom, bathroom, toilet); Natural lighting and ventilation; Materials; Privacy; Thermal insulation | [20,40,44,64,69] | |
Housing support services | Pipe and electrical repair services; Garbage collection; Internet; Fire system; Street lighting | [2,9,40,44] | |
Local historical housing renovation rules | ---- | Height of building; Percentage of land use for construction; Proportion of openings; Types of the facade materials; Renovation approval process | [17,42,44] |
Sense of place | Place identity | Identity 1; Identity 2; Identity 3; Identity 4 | [19] |
Place attachment | Attachment 1; Attachment 2; Attachment 3; Attachment 4 | ||
Place dependence | Dependence 1; Dependence 2; Dependence 3; Dependence 4 |
Socio-Demographic Characteristics | Variable | Frequency (n = 129) | % | Overall Satisfied | Overall Dissatisfied | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Frequency (n = 129) | % | Frequency (n = 129) | % | ||||
Gender | Male | 67 | 51.94 | 38 | 45.78 | 29 | 63.04 |
Female | 62 | 48.06 | 45 | 54.22 | 17 | 36.96 | |
Age | <18 | 4 | 3.10 | 3 | 3.61 | 1 | 2.17 |
19–30 | 36 | 27.91 | 22 | 26.51 | 14 | 30.43 | |
31–61 | 69 | 53.49 | 46 | 55.42 | 23 | 50.00 | |
>61 | 20 | 15.50 | 12 | 14.46 | 8 | 17.39 | |
Monthly income (Turkish lira ₺) | <2000 ₺ | 25 | 19.38 | 16 | 19.28 | 9 | 19.57 |
2000–3000 ₺ | 53 | 41.09 | 36 | 43.37 | 17 | 36.96 | |
3000–4000 ₺ | 30 | 23.26 | 14 | 16.87 | 16 | 34.78 | |
4000–6000 ₺ | 13 | 10.08 | 9 | 10.84 | 4 | 8.70 | |
>6000 ₺ | 8 | 6.19 | 8 | 9.64 | --- | --- | |
Home ownership | Owner | 63 | 48.84 | 48 | 57.83 | 15 | 32.61 |
Rental | 66 | 51.16 | 35 | 42.17 | 31 | 67.39 | |
Length of residency | <5 Years | 32 | 24.81 | 20 | 24.10 | 12 | 26.09 |
5–10 | 18 | 13.95 | 9 | 10.84 | 9 | 19.57 | |
10–20 | 28 | 21.71 | 20 | 24.10 | 8 | 17.39 | |
20–40 | 25 | 19.38 | 15 | 18.07 | 10 | 21.74 | |
>40 | 26 | 20.16 | 19 | 22.89 | 7 | 15.22 | |
Ethnicity | Turkish-Cypriot | 84 | 65.12 | 57 | 68.67 | 27 | 58.70 |
Non-Turkish-Cypriot | 45 | 34.88 | 26 | 31.33 | 19 | 41.3 | |
Household size (people per house) | 1 | 5 | 3.88 | 3 | 3.61 | 2 | 4.35 |
2 | 32 | 24.81 | 23 | 27.71 | 9 | 19.57 | |
3 | 30 | 23.26 | 20 | 24.10 | 10 | 21.74 | |
4 | 38 | 29.46 | 25 | 30.12 | 13 | 28.26 | |
>4 | 24 | 18.59 | 12 | 14.46 | 12 | 26.09 | |
Marital status | Single | 49 | 37.99 | 30 | 36.15 | 19 | 41.30 |
Married | 80 | 62.01 | 53 | 63.85 | 27 | 58.70 | |
Education | Primary school | 23 | 17.83 | 14 | 16.87 | 9 | 19.57 |
Middle school | 20 | 15.50 | 13 | 15.66 | 7 | 15.22 | |
High school | 43 | 33.33 | 26 | 31.33 | 17 | 36.96 | |
University degree | 43 | 33.34 | 30 | 36.14 | 13 | 28.26 | |
Employment sector | Private | 16 | 12.40 | 12 | 14.46 | 4 | 8.70 |
Public | 113 | 87.60 | 71 | 85.54 | 42 | 91.30 | |
Number of bedrooms | 1 | 15 | 11.63 | 12 | 14.46 | 3 | 6.52 |
2 | 41 | 31.78 | 24 | 28.92 | 17 | 36.96 | |
3 | 54 | 41.86 | 32 | 38.55 | 22 | 47.83 | |
4 | 17 | 13.18 | 13 | 15.66 | 4 | 8.70 | |
>4 | 2 | 1.55 | 2 | 2.41 | --- |
Overall Satisfaction | Very Dissatisfied (%) | Dissatisfied (%) | Slightly Satisfied (%) | Satisfied (%) | Very Satisfied (%) | Mean | SD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Neighborhood facilities | 0.00 | 0.78 | 37.98 | 55.81 | 5.43 | 3.14 | 0.11 |
Environmental features | 4.65 | 21.71 | 26.36 | 39.53 | 7.75 | 2.85 | 0.19 |
Social environment | 4.65 | 12.40 | 25.58 | 46.51 | 10.85 | 3.08 | 0.19 |
Housing conditions | 1.55 | 12.40 | 29.46 | 40.31 | 16.28 | 3.14 | 0.19 |
Housing features | 0.00 | 3.10 | 20.16 | 60.47 | 16.28 | 3.50 | 0.14 |
Housing support services | 3.10 | 9.30 | 37.98 | 44.19 | 5.43 | 3.03 | 0.16 |
Local historical housing renovation rules | 3.88 | 8.53 | 49.61 | 32.56 | 5.43 | 2.91 | 0.16 |
Sense of place | 0.00 | 0.78 | 25.78 | 62.50 | 10.94 | 3.42 | 0.11 |
Variables | Model 1 | Model 2 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Coefficient Estimates | Marginal Effects | Coefficient Estimates | Marginal Effects | |
Socio-demographic characteristics | ||||
Gender | 0.69 (1.24) | 0.13 (1.29) | 1.62 (1.17) | 0.11 (1.25) |
Age | −0.40 (−0.76) | −0.08 (−0.74) | −1.36 (−1.18) | −0.09 (−1.28) |
Monthly income | −0.12 (−0.38) | −0.02 (−0.38) | −0.10 (−0.08) | −0.006 (−0.07) |
Home ownership | −0.47 (−0.72) | −0.09 (−0.72) | 1.40 (1.49) | 0.09 (0.78) |
Length of residency | −0.24 (−1.14) | −0.04 (−1.17) | −0.81 ** (−2.44) | −0.05 *** (−1.75) |
Ethnicity | −0.34 (−0.70) | −0.06 (−0.70) | −2.39 ** (−2.14) | −0.15 * (−2.67) |
Household size | −0.30 (−0.98) | −0.06 (−1.02) | −1.55 *** (−1.95) | −0.10 * (−2.31) |
Marital status | 0.20 (0.26) | 0.04 (0.26) | 2.34 *** (1.65) | 0.15 * (2.23) |
Education | 0.21 (0.81) | 0.03 (0.78) | 0.31 (0.63) | 0.02 (0.57) |
Employment sector | −0.50 (−0.52) | −0.08 (−0.57) | −1.34 (−0.72) | −0.06 (−0.52) |
Number of bedrooms | 0.51 (1.27) | 0.10 (1.36) | 0.59 (0.71) | 0.03 (0.65) |
Residential environment | 0.67 ** (2.47) | 0.13 ** (2.35) | --- | --- |
Neighborhood facilities | --- | 1.14 (1.17) | 0.07 (1.15) | |
Environmental features | --- | --- | 1.10 * (2.19) | 0.07 *** (1.69) |
Social environment | --- | --- | 1.19 *** (1.67) | 0.08 *** (1.87) |
Housing conditions | ---- | --- | −0.81 (−0.92) | −0.05 (−1.13) |
Housing features | ---- | --- | 0.70 (1.05) | 0.04 (1.54) |
Housing support services | ---- | --- | 3.76 *** (1.75) | 0.25 * (2.12) |
Local historical housing renovation rules | 0.47 *** (1.65) | 0.09 *** (1.69) | 2.10 * (2.71) | 0.14 * (2.01) |
Sense of place | 1.86 * (4.88) | 0.36 * (5.45) | --- | --- |
Place identity | --- | --- | 2.47 ** (2.21) | 0.16 * (3.13) |
Place attachment | --- | --- | 2.47 *** (1.65) | 0.15 * (2.15) |
Place dependence | --- | --- | 0.27 (0.26) | 0.01 (0.20) |
Pseudo R2 | 0.44 * | --- | 0.76 * | --- |
Components | Model 3 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Coefficient Estimates | t-Value | Marginal Effects | t-Value | |
Shopping center | −0.66 *** | (−1.94) | −0.14 * | (−2.09) |
Namik Kemal Square | 1.09 * | (3.48) | 0.23 * | (3.40) |
Public parking | 0.93 * | (2.74) | 0.19 * | (2.93) |
Traffic density | −0.45 ** | (−2.36) | −0.10 ** | (−2.40) |
Night lighting | −0.34 *** | (−1.67) | −0.07 *** | (−1.67) |
Neighborhood relations | 0.30 *** | (1.75) | 0.07 *** | (1.67) |
Security | 0.27 ** | (2.15) | 0.06 *** | (1.65) |
Quality of windows | 0.64 ** | (2.04) | 0.13 ** | (2.03) |
Lighting of stairwell | 0.46 ** | (2.02) | 0.09 ** | (2.04) |
Location of kitchen | 1.14 * | (2.83) | 0.24 ** | (2.57) |
Location of toilet | −1.07 ** | (−2.10) | −0.23 ** | (−2.03) |
Size of living room | −0.70 *** | (−1.86) | −0.15 *** | (−1.79) |
Size of kitchen | 0.96 ** | (2.55) | 0.20 ** | (2.50) |
Natural light of living room | 0.59 *** | (1.68) | 0.13 *** | (1.75) |
Natural light of kitchen | −1.20 ** | (−2.26) | −0.25 ** | (−2.25) |
Natural ventilation of bedroom | 1.25 ** | (2.43) | 0.27 ** | (2.21) |
Thermal isolation | −0.77 * | (−3.09) | −0.16 * | (−3.13) |
Electrical repairs | 0.64 ** | (2.07) | 0.14 ** | (2.07) |
Internet | 0.79 * | (2.82) | 0.17 * | (2.77) |
Height of building | 0.31 *** | (1.96) | 0.07 *** | (1.65) |
Identity 1 | 1.04 * | (3.62) | 0.211 * | (4.15) |
Identity 4 | 1.13 * | (3.78) | 0.23 * | (3.82) |
Attachment 1 | 1.11 * | (2.77) | 0.22 * | (2.80) |
Attachment 3 | 1.16 * | (2.89) | 0.23 * | (2.80) |
Dependence 1 | 0.50 ** | (2.25) | 0.09 ** | (2.33) |
Dependence 2 | 0.47 ** | (2.11) | 0.09 ** | (2.11) |
Dependence 4 | −0.94 * | (−3.86) | −0.18 * | (−2.17) |
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Davoodi, T.; Yapicoglu, B.; Dağlı, U.U. Measuring Residential Satisfaction in Historic Areas Using Actual–Aspiration Gap Theory: The Case of Famagusta, Northern Cyprus. Sustainability 2023, 15, 3917. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15053917
Davoodi T, Yapicoglu B, Dağlı UU. Measuring Residential Satisfaction in Historic Areas Using Actual–Aspiration Gap Theory: The Case of Famagusta, Northern Cyprus. Sustainability. 2023; 15(5):3917. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15053917
Chicago/Turabian StyleDavoodi, Tina, Balkiz Yapicoglu, and Uğur Ulaş Dağlı. 2023. "Measuring Residential Satisfaction in Historic Areas Using Actual–Aspiration Gap Theory: The Case of Famagusta, Northern Cyprus" Sustainability 15, no. 5: 3917. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15053917
APA StyleDavoodi, T., Yapicoglu, B., & Dağlı, U. U. (2023). Measuring Residential Satisfaction in Historic Areas Using Actual–Aspiration Gap Theory: The Case of Famagusta, Northern Cyprus. Sustainability, 15(5), 3917. https://doi.org/10.3390/su15053917