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Invite colleaguesHow downtown multifunctionality is packaged is a key to its success
Abstract
In the large downtowns in the US, the adaption rates and impacts of remote work have been strong and sparked efforts to make these districts far more multifunctional, especially by adding lots of new housing. While comparable city centres in Western Europe have not seen remote work have similar impacts on office occupancy, multifunctionalism has long been heralded as a factor that makes them strong. For example, it underpins their two key competitive advantages of dense agglomeration and the generation of many multipurpose trips. While multifunctionalism is a familiar concept and is often mentioned in relevant publications, there is amazingly little written about it theoretically, and little to no empirical research done on it. I took on that topic in a recent paper in which I noted that how downtown multifunctionality is ‘packaged’ in the physical containers in which the venues of these functions are activated, and how they physically relate to each other, are very often the key factors in determining whether efforts to make a downtown more multifunctional will succeed. I also argued that a function must have very magnetic destinations active in these containers. This paper focuses just on the topic of packaging functions and is an expansion of my prior analysis that covers much new ground.
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Author's Biography
N. David Milder David Milder is Founder and President of DANTH, Inc., a nationally recognised authority on downtown revitalisation. For over 45 years he has utilised his market research and management skills to assess the potentials of downtowns and recommend revitalisation and recruitment strategies and programmes. David also has managed several downtown special districts, has authored three books and numerous articles. He is also the Founding Editor of The American Downtown Revitalization Review. His recent research has focused on Central Social Districts, the changing nature of work and its impacts on downtowns, and downtown small business development.