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Invite colleaguesLarge-scale events and sustainable urban regeneration: Key principles for host cities
Abstract
Hosting large-scale events is often justified by the envisaged regeneration benefits. This paper explores the merits of events as regeneration tools, before providing recommendations for future host cities about how best to maximise opportunities for sustainable regeneration. Large-scale events are often represented as the epitome of 'top-down' approaches to regeneration, but ideas are suggested here that can allow events to assist a diverse range of target beneficiaries at the neighbourhood level. The paper concludes that cities should try to follow ten generic principles to maximise the regeneration legacy of events, but that they also need to think about which events, or which portfolio of events, would be most likely to assist their regeneration objectives.
The full article is available to subscribers to the journal.
Author's Biography
Andrew Smith is a Senior Lecturer in Tourism within the School of Architecture and the Built Environment at the University of Westminster. He has published research on the relationship between sport events, tourism and urban regeneration and was involved in evaluating the Legacy Programme associated with the 2002 Commonwealth Games. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and member of the Scientific Committee of the ‘Sport and Tourism Global Network for Regional Development’.