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International Real Estate Review
Author(s) -
Yuming Fu,
AUTHOR_ID,
Tsur Somerville,
GU Meng-di,
Tongcheng Huang,
AUTHOR_ID,
AUTHOR_ID,
AUTHOR_ID
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of the asian real estate society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1029-6131
DOI - 10.53383/100012
Subject(s) - redevelopment , real estate , business , real estate development , decentralization , estate , stock (firearms) , space (punctuation) , finance , economics , geography , market economy , civil engineering , engineering , linguistics , philosophy , archaeology
This paper reviews the urban redevelopment activities in Shanghai as the land market reforms were introduced. We focus on the impact of land use institutions on the spatial pattern of these activities. Sites for private real estate redevelopment were supplied by individual districts in the city. But the need for districts to pay for the resettlement of displaced residents contributed to a spatial mismatch between the supply of redevelopment sites and the market demand for commercial real estate space. Resettlement costs are highest at the high demand locations. State owned enterprises and institutions occupying land allocated by the state also engaged in real estate development. Whereas the density of private redevelopment was sensitive to the volume of commercial activities in a district, this does not appear to have been important in determining the location of the significant increase in the stock of commercial space resulting from development by local enterprises and institutions. This growth shows considerable decentralization between 1993 and 1996, 50 Fu, Somerville, Gu and Huang indicative of spatially inefficient redevelopment activities by land-rich state enterprises.

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