Tuesday, October 28, 2008

So where do people want to live?

Shown below is a picture from some work in progress, where I am looking at the location choice preferences of different household types in Sydney. The picture shows where households with young children (i.e. all less than 15 years) would like to live. The graph shows the spatial variation in preference for detached dwellings only. I do look at the effect of dwelling type, but lets do one thing at a time shall we....

You can pretty safely ignore the scale -- just think warmer colours == 'more desirable'. (If you really want to know, its the log-probability of a couple-with-kids household choosing a dwelling in that region in a discrete choice experiment.... but lets not go there).



And what does it show? Well, couples with kids like the northen harbourside suburbs (i.e. Mosman, and around middle-harbour), and big chunks of the Eastern suburbs (Vaucluse, Centennial Park, etc). No real surprises there.

Other results show that couples with young kids do not like attached dwellings -- they really do want the suburban detached home. Well, most of them anyway.. there is always a distribution of preferences.

And what about couples without kids? The figure (below) shows an estimate for couple households without children where the household reference person is less than 55 years old. They really like the inner-west, dont they?

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Back to my knitting

After a couple of forays into economic matters, I'll get back to the sort of stuff I normally do.

Below is a map (click the image for bigger version) showing the proportion of journey to work trips made by either walking or bicycle, at the time of the 2001 census. Not surprising to see the huge walk/bike mode share near the city.


Just FYI, the dark blue patch out in the north-west (near Richmond) is an army barracks, so lots of army dudes live near thhe barrackds and stroll in I guess. Same for in the south (near Holdsworthy). Other than that, its basically the CBD (incl. North Sydney) and the University of New South Wales, with Sydney's second CBD (Parramatta) also having a reasonable amount of walking and cycling.