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Abstract The traditional downtown appears more popular now than it has been since at least the 1950s, not only in central cities—where an urban renaissance has helped to improve the prospects of the historic commercial core and, increasingly, neighborhood business districts—but also, a bit less expectedly, in the suburbs, where residents and workers crave a similar sort of environment and experience—albeit on a more modest scale.
Abstract The traditional downtown appears more popular now than it has been since at least the 1950s, not only in central cities—where an urban renaissance has helped to improve the prospects of the historic commercial core and, increasingly, neighborhood business districts—but also, a bit less expectedly, in the suburbs, where residents and workers crave a similar sort of environment and experience—albeit on a more modest scale.
Retail
Berne, Michael J. (author)
Suburban Remix ; 94-109
2018-01-01
16 pages
Article/Chapter (Book)
Electronic Resource
English
Online Contents | 2012
Online Contents | 2012
Wiley | 2008
|The changing retail industry and retail landscapes
Elsevier | 1998
|