Journal
REGIONAL SCIENCE AND URBAN ECONOMICS
Volume 94, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.regsciurbeco.2020.103618
Keywords
Density; Economics; History; Skyscrapers; Urban
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This paper discusses how tall and durable buildings can be used as a source of big data to trace the history of urban spatial structure, providing evidence on the correlation between building heights and land values, and suggesting future research areas.
Micro-geographic data capturing the spatial distribution of economic activity within cities in history are difficult to access. This paper discusses how tall and durable buildings can be exploited as a source of big data to trace the history of the spatial structure of cities. To this end, we provide stylized evidence on how building heights correlate with land values over space and time within cities, review the related nascent literature, and suggest future research areas.
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