4.6 Article

Urban Land Monetization-Driven Land Use Orientations: An Insight from Land Lease Prices in Addis Ababa

Journal

LAND
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/land11060796

Keywords

urbanization; land rent; urban land monetization; land lease; urban land use; Ethiopia; Addis Ababa

Funding

  1. VLIR UOS through the GlobalMinds Scholarship of KU Leuven University

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The study reveals that in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, slums in the urban center have been replaced by high-end commercial buildings, while low-cost residential condominiums have expanded in the urban periphery. Urban land supply and land prices are found to be determinant factors for urban land use orientations, pushing low-end groups towards the periphery.
Urban land leasing is a land monetization strategy that was introduced in 1991 by the contemporary regime. Since then, urban center slum demolitions and their replacement by high-end commercial buildings and urban peripheral low-cost residential condominium expansions have been common occurrences in Addis Ababa. Land rentiers quote extreme land prices at the city center and relatively low prices towards the periphery. Therefore, it has been hypothesized that urban land supply and land prices are determinant factors for urban land use orientations, which have pushed low-end groups towards the periphery. Therefore, based on a lens of land rent theory, 1524 land lease prices and 1038 randomly selected land parcels using Google Earth were used to evaluate locational trends in land prices and land use orientations, respectively. This study revealed that there are significant variabilities between government benchmark land prices and actual quoted land prices. Because of the high rent gaps at the city center, significant land price quotations were recorded, and this overlaps with the urban center slum demolitions and slum resident resettlements at low-cost residential condominiums in the urban periphery. In the first 5 km from the urban economic center, land prices show a declining trend towards the periphery. The central business district is dominated by slums partially under demolition and high-end commercial buildings, while the periphery is dominated by high-rise low-cost residential condominiums. Therefore, the distance from the city center was found to be an explanatory factor of urban land prices. The contributions of other urban utilities to land prices, such as access to transportation routes, could be a future research area.

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