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Croydon’s Facelift: Exploring the Impacts of Urban Regeneration through Place Attachment Jack Waterman I certify that this dissertation is entirely my own work and no part of it has been submitted for a degree or other qualification in this or another institution. I also certify that I have not constructed data nor shared data with another candidate at Exeter University or elsewhere without specific authorisation. (BA) with Honours in Geography at the University of Exeter ............................. March 2016

Croydon’s Facelift- Exploring the Impacts of Urban Regeneration through Place Attachment

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Croydon’s Facelift: Exploring the Impacts of Urban

Regeneration through Place Attachment

Jack Waterman

I certify that this dissertation is entirely my own work and no part of it has been submitted for a degree or other qualification in this or another institution. I also certify

that I have not constructed data nor shared data with another candidate at Exeter University or elsewhere without specific authorisation.

(BA) with Honours in Geography at the University of Exeter

............................. March 2016

Ethics Approval

i

Table of Contents

ListofFigures............................................................................................................ii

ListofTables............................................................................................................iii

Acknowledgements..................................................................................................iv

Abstract....................................................................................................................v

1.Introduction..........................................................................................................11.1AimsandObjectives.......................................................................................................................................21.2DissertationStructure...................................................................................................................................3

2.Literaturereview...................................................................................................52.1UrbanGeography............................................................................................................................................52.2Urbanregeneration........................................................................................................................................72.3RebrandingtheCity.....................................................................................................................................102.4PlaceAttachment..........................................................................................................................................13

3.Methodology.......................................................................................................183.1Context..............................................................................................................................................................183.2ResearchDesign............................................................................................................................................203.3Methods............................................................................................................................................................213.4DataSampling................................................................................................................................................253.5EthicalConsiderations...............................................................................................................................26

4.Results................................................................................................................274.1DescriptiveStatistics..................................................................................................................................274.2TestingtheUsabilityofthePPP-Model..............................................................................................304.3ExploringtheRelationshipbetweenPlaceAttachmentandHowResidentsPerceivetheImpactsofUrbanRegeneration.....................................................................................................................34

5.Discussion...........................................................................................................455.1AssessingtheUsabilityofthePPP-model.........................................................................................455.2PlaceAttachmentandUrbanregeneration.......................................................................................476.Conclusion...........................................................................................................51

References..............................................................................................................53

Appendix1..............................................................................................................61

Appendix2..............................................................................................................65

Appendix3..............................................................................................................70

Appendix4..............................................................................................................74

Appendix5..............................................................................................................80

ii

List of Figures

Figure 2.1 The person-process-place model 16

Figure 3.1 Map of the Boroughs of Greater London 18

Figure 3.2 Map of Croydon 19

Figure 3.3 Flow diagram visualising the research design

21

Figure 3.4 Sites selected for door-to-door sampling 25

Figure 4.1 Distribution graph for place attachment scores 29

Figure 4.2 Model visualising the relative loadings of each measure of the PPP-model onto component 1 (place attachment)

35

Figure 4.3 No.1 Tower, Croydon, an example of Brutalism architecture in Croydon

38

Figure 5.1 Graph indicating the positive correlation between place attachment and perceptions of the impacts of urban regeneration

48

iii

List of Tables

Table 2.1 Various definitions for place attachment 13

Table 3.1 Questions used to measure place attachment and their sources 24

Table 4.1 Descriptive statistics for the sample population 27

Table 4.2 Descriptive data for place attachment scores 29

Table 4.3 Tests for the normality of the place attachment sample 30

Table 4.4 Frequency table for responses about issues concerning residents

31

Table 4.5 Correlation matrix: Place attachment and length of residence 32

Table 4.6 A rotated component matrix for a factor analysis comprising of the measure of the PPP-model

33

Table 4.7 Correlation matrix: Place attachment and response scores 34

Table 4.8 Correlation matrix: Increasing pride, improving reputation, and reducing crime and anti-social behaviour

37

iv

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank all those who gave their time to participate in this study,

particularly those who took part in interviews and focus groups. Their insights into the

issues that face residents of Croydon were invaluable and inspiring.

Thank you also to my personal tutor John Wylie for starting me off in the right

direction, and also my supervisor Neil Adger for keeping me on track.

v

Abstract

Regeneration can alter the perceived images of urban areas. Whilst often aiming to

modify the external image of urban areas, in many cases more can be done to appeal to

internal images or to overcome social and economic problems that frequently impact the

internal image of these urban areas. This study utilises the concept of place attachment

to investigate the influence urban regeneration has upon the internal image of place. It

also seeks to advance place attachment theory by applying the person-process-place

(PPP) model to the context of urban regeneration. A two-stage methodology of

qualitative and quantitative methods explores how place attachment can be impacted by

urban regeneration and how place attachment may be used as a metric for examining the

impact regeneration has on the internal image of the city. Place attachment has a

moderate positive correlation to optimism surrounding the impact urban regeneration

has on resident-held perceptions of place. The PPP-model is shown to be valid to some

extent. The relative importance of each measure in the PPP-model is discussed in the

context of urban regeneration. This finding suggests that using place attachment as a

metric offers a potential way of better understanding the impact of urban regeneration

on the internal image of the city and on internal audiences. Further research is needed to

confirm or contest these findings.

1

1. Introduction

“Advertiser survey of life in Croydon Reveals a town weighed down by its

own reputation”

(Davies, 2015)

A survey by the Croydon Advertiser reveals that the London Borough of Croydon is

hampered by its reputation. A reputation for crime, anti-social behaviour and out-dated

building design is widespread throughout media perceptions of the borough. Croydon is

also linked to the 2011 riots and a flagging local economy (Watts, 2015). Reversing this

trend is very much on the agenda for Croydon Council, who have orchestrated a £5.25

billion public-private regeneration plan which hopes to turn Croydon into a thriving

town centre (Watts, 2015).

Croydon Council is not unique in this endeavour. Indeed many local councils in

the UK and beyond seek to rebrand their town through regeneration. Geographical

scholarship, particularly in urban geography, has a long-standing interest in enquiries

relating to urban regeneration and to place branding (Hall and Barrett, 2012; Hubbard,

2006). In particular geographers have explored how urban regeneration increasingly

aims to rebrand cities in order to attract investment or discard an old city image (Vivant,

2013; Bennett and Savani, 2003). City rebranding is broken down into two facets;

namely appealing to external audiences in forming a unique selling point (USP) and

appealing to internal audiences in forming a place identity (Colomb and Kalandides,

2010). Increasingly, rebranding strategies overlook internal audiences in pursuit of

attracting investment and thus further development, leading to poor representation of

local narrative and lower place ties among residents and local communities (Aitken and

Campelo, 2011). Academics stress the importance of building an internal image of the

city in successful rebranding strategies (Warnaby and Medway, 2013). Given this

2

importance, there is a need to explore how urban regeneration impacts the internal

image of the city. This study proposes the mobilisation of the concept of place

attachment as a means of exploring the impact urban regeneration has on the internal

image of the city. Place attachment is defined as an affective bond between people and

places (Hidalgo and Hernanadez, 2001). Theory on place attachment has developed

significantly since Altman and Low (1992) published their landmark book on the

concept. Much work, particularly through modelling, has focused on how place

attachment is conceptualised. Scholars now call for advancement through the

application of place attachment theory into empirical research. This study seeks to

contribute to place attachment theory by utilising the person-place-process model (PPP-

model) (Scannell and Gifford, 2010). This model is highlighted as a consolidation of

previous models for place attachment (Lewicka, 2011).

1.1 Aims and Objectives

The aims of this study are detailed below:

- To assess the usability of the Person-Place-Process Model,

o How well does the PPP-model output correlate to proxy measures for

place attachment?

o Is each measure within the PPP-model significantly explained by one

component in a factor analysis?

- To examine the role place attachment can play in examining how the internal

image of the city is impacted by urban regeneration.

o Does place attachment correlate positively with resident perceptions of

the impacts of urban regeneration?

3

o Which measures of the PPP-model are most significant in the context of

urban regeneration?

These aims will be assessed through a mixed methodology of both quantitative

and qualitative methods, employing questionnaires, semi-structured interviews and

focus groups. A two-step methodology is used, primarily involving inductive

approaches, which then inform larger scale data collection. Not only does this mixed

methods approach continue a long tradition for urban geography of rigorous empirical

research, it also appeals to calls for more considered approaches of meaning and

subjectivity within the sub-discipline (Thrift, 1993). Moreover, place attachment

theorists including Lewicka (2011) call for the sustained use of qualitative methods

alongside a rich founding of quantitative methods in better understanding the inherently

social phenomena.

Place image and branding is inherently geographical in nature. It is through our

perceptions of place that place identities are formed (Kalandides, 2012). Place

attachment is also a distinct people-place relationship, exploring the concept and how it

varies through place, scale and time can give valuable insight to geographical

scholarship. This study contributes, through the concept of place attachment, a potential

way of examining how urban regeneration can influence resident perceptions of place

image.

1.2 Dissertation Structure

Section 2 reviews the current literature on urban geography, urban regeneration and

rebranding and also place attachment. Section 3 details the methodology; the

epistemological and ontological frameworks adopted for this study, along with a

presentation of the methods that were used and how they were deployed. Section 4

4

presents the results and begins an analysis of these results. Section 5 consolidates these

results into key findings, considering the limitations and wider implications. Section 6

concludes the dissertation, considering questions that have arisen from this study, along

with suggestions for further research that may build on the findings and improve on the

shortcoming of this research.

5

2. Literature review

This section begins by tracing the evolution of Urban Geography, the theory, methods

and contentions that have shaped it and the implications this has for current research.

Urban regeneration and specifically urban rebranding are then discussed. The image of

the city is incorporated into this discussion, broken down into the internal, external and

self-reflecting image and the roles each plays in rebranding cities. The concept of place

attachment is then introduced, with critical discussion of the theory and methods

surrounding it. The relationship between place attachment and urban regeneration is

examined with particular focus on how place attachment may be mobilised to assess

how urban regeneration may interact with the internal image of the city.

2.1 Urban Geography

Throughout its history, several theoretical ‘turns’ that Geography as a discipline has

experienced, including the quantitative revolution, critical theory and the cultural turn

have impacted urban geography. The sub-discipline has a long tradition of positivist,

empirical enquiry and modelling; there is call to maintain traditional frameworks of

applied research however academics are now acutely aware of the limits to the external

validity of findings.

Abstraction and the creation of nomothetic laws were prevalent in urban

geography, from political ecology research of the Chicago School of Sociology to more

formalised positivist empirical research after the quantitative revolution in the 1960s.

Urban geography sought to observe urban forms and processes objectively in order to

create generalised models (for example Christaller’s Central Place Theory) (Gregory et

al, 2009).

The development of critical theory in the 1970s and 1980s including Marxist

theory acknowledged that some processes that impact subjects of enquiry are not always

6

observable. Marxist urban geographers consider capitalist regimes of accumulation and

other structural processes in order to explain social processes (Pacione, 2009). Critical

theory however continued the tradition of creating far-reaching laws to explain

phenomena.

Postmodernism, post-structuralism and the cultural turn in urban geography

sought to move away from out-dated, theoretical ideas. Academics incorporated late-

modern concepts including globalisation, neoliberalism and de-urbanisation in

geographical enquiry, avowing an increased awareness of the complexities of urban

change and layers of subjectivity. This caused a degree of splintering in the sub

discipline. Whilst academics such as Daniel Sui stated the need to “eliminate the

postmodern virus” (1999: 409), academics including Dear and Flusty (1998) were

pioneering the new approach, theorising new models of the postmodern city. Despite

this, urban geography still failed to overcome tendencies to abstraction and

reductionism (Hall and Barrett, 2012). Leading to what Nigel Thrift (1993) detailed as

an ‘urban impasse’; the loss of the urban as an object and subject of enquiry.

Urban geography has seen a long evolution of theory and practice, shaping the

research that takes place today. Hubbard (2006) highlights the importance of

maintaining traditional frameworks for research whilst also questioning established

concepts in urban geography and remaining reflexive of the fact that our interpretations

of wider urban form can only ever be partial. This has been taken into account for this

study and has influenced research design and methodology. Scannell and Gifford’s

(2010) person-process-place model is used to measure place attachment. Whilst it is a

consolidation of research in place attachment, there is awareness of the shortcomings

and potential limits to how comprehensively abstract models can measure social

phenomena.

7

2.2 Urban regeneration

Urban planning and regeneration has long sought to turn space into place (Jones and

Evans, 2012). Hall and Barrett (2012) highlight that regeneration is most often carried

out to meet goals such as improving quality of life, the physical environment or

economic prospects. Harvey (1982) identifies urban regeneration as a method of

revalorising cities for new waves of capital accumulation after a cycle of decline. How

urban regeneration is carried out undoubtedly has impacts for stakeholders, particularly

for those living in the spaces of regeneration. Gentrification has been a key process in

urban regeneration and is discussed below. Increasingly, regeneration seeks to rebrand

cities, making them more attractive to investment.

Like Geography more widely, the theory and practice of urban regeneration

have undergone many changes. Formerly, the state played a major role in coordinating

large-scale redevelopment, rolling out ‘master plans’ aiming to comprehensively

redesign cities. Urban planners including Le Corbusier were highly influential during

the 1960s when brutalism became a widespread architectural design in the UK and

elsewhere. Jacobs (1961) describes these master plans as ‘state bulldozers’, excluding

entire communities and distinct heritages from cities. These regeneration initiatives, as

Jones and Evans (2008) explain, simplified development by effacing existing values and

history, thus damaging people-place relations through a ‘tabula rasa’ approach. Despite

undergoing a process of ‘whitewashing’ cities, the Keynesian city of the 1960s,

described by Smith (2002) as a centre of capitalist reproduction underwritten in many

forms by the state, is considered a space of the social reproduction of many class,

gender and race inequalities. Urban regeneration in many cases reproduced these

inequalities. In the 1980s these development strategies fell out of favour with successive

waves of privatisation and neoliberalism.

8

Now it is widely agreed in the literature and more broadly that the ‘new right’

dominates urban regeneration practices in Western Europe and North America (Hall and

Barrett, 2012). This is an ideal that states that the free market is the best way to bring

about urban regeneration, assuring the correct services are provided at minimal cost.

Whilst the benefits have been noted, there is much to be said for the spatial injustices

that come with this current form of urban regeneration. It is worthwhile comparing

current and former processes of urban regeneration because, through means of

gentrification and revanchism, social exclusion is still prevalent (Smith, 1996).

Traditionally, funding was allocated based on perceived need. Whilst often still coming

from central government, more recently funding is attained through competitive

bidding. This leaves a gap for deprived areas that do not have the means to self-organise

to create funding campaigns (Oatley, 1998). The impetus is thus on local stakeholders

to self-organise to compete against other urban areas in neoliberal frameworks (Catney

et al, 2014).

Neil Smith (1996) has examined gentrification and its extensive links to wider

processes of urban restructuring and revalorisation. He defines the term as the process

in which inner-city working class neighbourhoods are refurbished by private capital.

The definitions of gentrification held by many scholars have been influenced by Glass

(1964), who asserts that gentrification is the subtle replacement of the working class by

the middle classes in residences formerly seen as shabby and modest, until no original

residents remain. Ley (2003) highlights the exclusionary effects of gentrification for

artists in urban space that becomes aestheticised and thus more expensive. Atkinson

(2004) lays out both benefits and costs of gentrification, whilst many are priced out of

housing, the increased influx of capital brings with it the opportunity for higher local

spending and thus job creation, bringing revitalisation to run down urban areas.

9

Atkinson (2004) suggests that much UK urban policy has moved to favour

policies that pursue revitalisation through gentrification. These policies have recently

moved to include place-marketing processes. Indeed several academics highlight that

cities now market themselves in particular ways in neoliberal and increasingly

globalised networks as entrepreneurial cities, attracting investment and interest from

certain demographics, particularly from the so-called creative class (Enright, 2013;

Vivant, 2010; Swyngedouw, Moulaert and Rodriguez, 2002). The creative class is a

demographic of skilled and mobile workers who are employed in creative sectors,

sometimes labelled the ‘Bobo community’ for their bohemian yet bourgeoisie tastes for

places with a creative identity (Enright, 2013). Richard Florida (2012) argues that the

creative class can foster new business growth and enhanced regional spending,

contributing to a thriving urban economy. The validity and long term sustainability of

this theory has been criticised. Peck (2005) raises the issue of the transient and therefore

unstable nature of the creative class, who may fleetingly respond to policy

implementation in any given place, thus removing the ‘place’ from creative place

marketing. This potentially limits the possibility of long term economic growth whilst

giving rise to the notion that countless urban areas can become ‘creative spaces’

regardless of actual authentic place-based creative identity. Indeed, Murray (2001)

comments on the homogenising effect of multiple cities in a global network marketing

themselves as creative places. Nonetheless this form of place marketing has become

popular (Foord, 2013).

Processes of urban regeneration have thus undergone significant changes,

however the implications for spatial justice are still prevalent today. Considering these

implications is critical in geographical research. Gentrification particularly has been and

remains a powerful process in urban restructuring, and is important to consider in any

examination of urban regeneration. As briefly explained, place marketing can be linked

10

to the revalorisation and thus the gentrification of urban space. How cities are branded

and marketed has significant impacts for stakeholders, this theme is continued in the

next section.

2.3 Rebranding the City

As mentioned above urban policy makers have become increasingly aware of marketing

cities in particular ways to attract investment. West (1997) states that a significant

majority of UK towns and cities have attempted to rebrand themselves using marketing

techniques. Indeed Young and Lever (1997) write that in 1995 93% of local authorities

in the UK undertook place-marketing activities. The reasons for rebranding are similar

to those for physically regenerating urban environments, several academics draw

reference to rebranding in order to increase tourism and investment (Bramwell and

Rawding, 1996; Jacobsen, 2012). Bennett and Savani (2003) discuss the role of

rebranding in replacing an out-dated place image. They specifically draw upon

Glasgow, Leeds and Manchester as post-industrial cities that sought to discard an old

imagery of production and urban decline linked to the shrinking of heavy industry in

favour of images that would encourage leisure and tourism, differing vastly from their

industrial pasts.

Brands are formed in peoples’ minds (Kavaratzis and Hatch, 2013). Therefore

urban rebranding is about influencing how people perceive cities. Rebranding is a

strategic attempt to alter the perceived image of cities (or the place image) people hold

in their minds (Kalandides, 2011). Place image, as Kalandides (2012) states, is an

integrated part of place identity. Since the cultural turn in Geography, the image of the

city has come to be examined as a construction of discourse and practice (Hubbard,

2006). This social constructionist approach defines places to exist through

representations, which can be both read and written (Jones and Natter, 1997). This is

11

contrary to Löw (2001: quoted in Kalandides, 2012) who sees place image as a

combination of both ‘social goods’ positioned in space and also how these goods relate

to each other and are perceived; a critical realist perspective. Indeed Jones (2011) draws

on the importance of the physical landscape, particularly architecture and the built

environment in creating place identities. Creswell and Hoskins (2008) identify place to

be constituted of materiality: the tangible element of place (i.e. the built environment),

and a realm of meaning: relating to social processes and how people perceive and feel

towards a specific place. Significant amounts of literature on place image are based in

social constructionist epistemologies because place image is based on perception

(Warnaby and Medway, 2013), however the materiality of place remains important as it

can also influence place image if it is seen as iconic or representative in some way

(Warnaby and Medway, 2010).

Managing place brands involves appealing to several different audiences in a

specific site, connecting with business investors and local communities alike (Bennett

and Savani, 2003). Academics have drawn on the need to appeal to both internal

audiences and external audiences (Hall and Barrett, 2012; Warnaby and Medway,

2013). Colomb and Kalandides (2010) explain two facets to place branding, namely the

need to form a unique selling point to external audiences (e.g. investors) and to

reinforce local identity to internal audiences (e.g. residents). Similarly, Rijpers and

Smeets (1998) identify three differing forms of place image when referring to a city’s

reputation: the internal, external and self-reflecting image. The internal image entails

how internal audiences perceive the city (i.e. local stakeholders and communities) and

the external image refers to how people outside of the city perceive it (i.e. investors,

prospective property buyers). They find that the internal image is influenced mostly by

the degree of social inconveniences (e.g. vandalism, anti-social behaviour) whilst the

external image is influenced more by the visual quality of an area. The self-reflecting

12

image incorporates a noteworthy dynamic, referring to the reputation that internal

stakeholders feel is held among people not living in their place of residence (i.e. what

do people who don’t live here think about this place?). Anderson (2008) builds on this,

residents may wish to move out of a place because they believe that people outside a

place perceive it negatively, which may carry with it implications for their reputation

and status. This is a manifestation of the self-reflecting image, becoming to some extent

a mirror of the internal image as residents extend their perceptions of place to assume

that those outside perceive it in the same way. Thus the degree of connectedness

between both the internal image and external image is exemplified; both become

important in place image and urban rebranding research.

The importance of appealing to all audiences is repeated throughout literature on

place branding, Colomb and Kalandides (2010) draw reference to the importance of the

participation of both internal and external audiences in (re)branding place, this is

exemplified by Anderson (2008) above. Despite this much attention is turned to

marketing place to external audiences whilst overlooking the importance of internal

audiences (Hall and Barrett, 2012). As previously discussed cities market themselves

competitively to gain investment in neoliberal frameworks (see section 2.2). This need

to compete with other cities for investment may lead to the neglect of internal audiences

in rebranding and urban regeneration more widely (For examples relating to the creative

class in world cities including Paris, London and Berlin, see Vivant, 2010; Foord, 2013;

van Schipstal and Nicholls, 2014). This exclusion from the branding processes of

internal audiences, as Aitken and Campelo (2011) discuss, leads to poor representation

of local narrative and lower place ties among residents and local communities.

There is therefore a disparity between urban rebranding theory, which states the

importance of appealing to both internal and external audiences, and practice, which

often overlooks the benefits of marketing place towards internal audiences. Given this

13

distinction, there is perhaps a need to examine the influence urban regeneration has on

how internal audiences (e.g. residents) feel towards place as this in turn has implications

for (re)structuring place image; the overarching aim of many regeneration initiatives.

The next section discusses the role place attachment studies may hold in examining how

regeneration influences internal perceptions of place image.

2.4 Place Attachment

As the previous section has explored, often more can be done to incorporate the views

of internal audiences into urban rebranding strategies. The concept of place attachment

has the potential to be utilised in order to examine how internal audiences (particularly

residents) perceive their locality, which has been shown to be a vital part of any urban

regeneration initiative. This section will outline place attachment, the theory and

practice in place attachment research and the current state of the discourse.

Although place attachment is inherently intuitive, there are varying definitions

throughout the literature. Several of these are briefly summarised in table 2.1. Each

Author(s) Definition of Place Attachment

Hidalgo and Hernandez

(2001)

An affective bond or link between people and specific places

Löw (1992) An individual’s cognitive or emotional connection to a

particular setting or milieu

Scannell and Gifford

(2010)

The bonding that occurs between individuals and their

meaningful environments

Moore and Graefe

(2003)

The extent to which an individual values or identifies with a

particular environmental setting

Table 2.1: Various definitions for place attachment.

14

definition refers to a people-place relationship that describes a bond with place in one

form or another.

Several concepts have been mobilised in order to explain attachments to place,

leading to some confusion in the discourse. Concepts that academics have explored

include sense of place, topophilia, rootedness and place dependency (Lewicka, 2011).

This has led some to question the vitality of place research (Pretty et al, 2003), however

others see this as a sign of strong theoretical advancement and a need now to move to

applications of place attachment (Scannell and Gifford, 2010). There is an emergent

division between methods used to measure place attachment. This is seen through a

division between quantitative and qualitative methods.

Quantitative methods emerged primarily through proxy measures such as length

of residence, house ownership and neighbourhood ties (Riger and Lavrakas, 1981).

These measures imply positive attachment; they are partially beneficial as a method of

confirming the results of place attachment models, as a positive correlation would

indicate that place attachment measurement has been accurate with some degree of

confidence. Quantitative methods have allowed for the development of models that

enable for numerical assessment of place attachment, which has many similarities to

urban geographical enquiry. Several models have sought to examine multiple

dimensions of place attachment, which has led partly to the conceptual confusion in the

discourse. Williams and Vaske (2003) distinguish between place attachment and place

dependence; the former being linked to affective bonds whilst the later refers to the

fulfilment of instrumental needs in place. This model has been advanced extensively in

different directions, incorporating other such concepts as social bonding (Kyle et al,

2005) or familiarity, belongingness and rootedness (Hammitt et al, 2006). In a different

fashion, Jorgensen and Stedman (2001) address sense of place as a construct of place

attachment, place identity and place dependence. It is evident therefore that there is

15

much divergence in the discourse on place attachment; Scannell and Gifford (2010)

have developed the person-place-process (PPP) model (see figure 2.1) in an attempt to

consolidate the extensive literature. The model is an incorporation of multiple measures.

Its usability is yet to be fully explored (Hidalgo, 2013), the authors stress that it should

be utilised in as many contexts as possible in order to advance the application of place

attachment theory.

The PPP model is broken down into a tripartite framework of person, place, and

process. The person aspect refers to cultural measures: group attachments to a specific

place, and individual measures: significant experiences in place that have influenced the

person. The place dimension is broken down into social: individual identification with

people in a place, and physical: attachment to physical aspects of place. Finally the

process dimension is comprised of affect: emotions linked to place, cognition:

considering yourself as linked to place, and behaviour: actions that perpetuate

connection to place.

A majority of place attachment research focuses on quantitative methods

(Lewicka, 2011). This tendency is criticised as people-place relationships are defined as

inherently embodied. Qualitative measures include interviews and focus groups in

which different statements carrying meaning about certain places are analysed

(Lewicka, 2011). Focus groups are particularly useful as they allow deeper elicitation of

detail regarding place relations and perceptions. The value of both qualitative and

quantitative methods is noted. Whilst a mixed methodology is not specifically purported

as most beneficial for place attachment research, the importance of not excluding

qualitative methods is stressed (Lewicka, 2011). Thus a mixed methodological

framework for place attachment studies may allow for more advancement. Devine-

Wright (2011) utilises a two stage methodology two mobilise place attachment in the

context of the public acceptance of renewable energy. The first stage involved focus

16

Figure 2.1: The person-process-place model. Source: Scannell and Gifford, 2010: 2.

17

groups to establish key issues linked to the local energy project. This then informed the

second stage of questionnaires that measured place attachment with more specific detail

to local meanings and understandings of the implications of the renewable energy

project. This is a particularly interesting utilisation of place attachment as it links to

how residents perceive a development project will influence their place. Place

attachment may then be a useful means of measuring how urban regeneration influences

the internal image of a city.

18

3. Methodology

This section outlines the epistemological, ontological and methodological standpoints

from which research is carried out in this study. The methods used are then justified,

alongside an assessment of how they were carried out. Sampling procedure is specified

followed by the ethical considerations that arose in undertaking this research.

3.1 Context

This study is situated in the London Borough of Croydon, the second largest London

Borough by population with approximately 370,000 inhabitants (Office for National

Statistics (ONS), 2014). It is one of the most southerly Boroughs in the Greater London

Authority (see figure 3.1). In the late 1950s and early 1960s Croydon was developed as

a commercial centre, the Whitgift Shopping Centre was the biggest in Europe at the

time. It has on several occasions applied for city status but has been rejected on each

Figure 3.1: Map of the Boroughs of Greater London. Source: London Councils, 2015.

19

occasion as it was seen to not have a distinct identity from the rest of the London

Boroughs. Croydon remains a substantial services and retail hub today but has seen

significant decline in recent years. Marred by a poor reputation: particularly for crime

and an unattractive architectural design (Davies, 2015), Croydon has a large media

reputation for being a hotspot for anti-social behaviour. It has on many occasions been

the subject of ‘stabbing’ jokes by comedians such as Jimmy Carr and was famously

used as a derogatory remark by David Bowie:

“I think it’s the most derogatory thing I can say about somebody or something: ‘God,

it’s so f*****g Croydon!”

(Source: Ali, 2016)

Figure 3.2: Map of Croydon. Source: Weatherly, 2009.

20

Croydon is currently undergoing significant redevelopment. There are several

projects underway alongside major infrastructural improvements, totalling a £5.25

billion public-private regeneration scheme (Watts, 2015). Very much the flagship

development in the borough, Hammerson and Westfield are in partnership to build a

new shopping centre to replace the Whitgift Centre, due for completion in 2019

(Croydon Advertiser, 2015). BoxPark is due to open a new food centre in June 2016,

after the success of BoxPark Shoreditch. Alongside this a grassroots organisation

known as Croydon Tech City (CTC) is developing Croydon as a new Tech Hub. CTC

has seen some success; Croydon is currently the fastest growing tech cluster in the UK,

achieving 23 per cent growth of new tech and media businesses since 2011, a rate

higher than the London average of 17% (Rose, 2014).

Croydon is a location that has significant reputation issues; it is also undergoing

substantial redevelopment, which hopes to rebrand Croydon as a place for retail, culture

and leisure (Croydon Partnership, 2016). It is thus a suitable location for studying the

impacts of regeneration on the internal image of the city.

3.2 Research Design

As discussed in the literature review, urban geography has traditionally taken a broad

positivist empirical epistemology to research. However recent developments have

drawn urban geography into a realm of subjectivity and meaning. This study takes on

board the summary of the sub-discipline by Hall and Barratt (2012): namely that

research should continue a tradition for empirical investigation of urban form and

processes whilst balancing this alongside the exploration of a realm of subjective

meaning. Studying place attachment allows for the continuation of this stance because

whilst much of the research in this field follows a quantitative approach, seeking to

21

create models for explaining place attachment, there is a strong call for more qualitative

research (Lewicka, 2011). This study thus adopts a mixed methodology, which allows

for a wider understanding of place attachment (Valentine, 2005).

3.3 Methods

This section will briefly outline each method of data collection used in this study. The

investigation follows a two-stage methodology, following a similar design used by

Devine-Wright (2011). The first stage was an inductive investigation using focus groups

and semi-structured interviews to elicit data regarding how residents felt about

Croydon, how they and others perceived its image, the regeneration taking place and

what key factors influenced these perceptions. The results from this stage informed both

the research outcomes and the design of the second stage of the methodology; namely a

questionnaire.

The questionnaire measures two things: firstly, place attachment and secondly

how residents feel regeneration will impact how they perceive the image of Croydon.

The questions used to elicit data for the second part of the questionnaire were created

Figure 3.3: Flow diagram visualising the research design.

22

from data collected in the first stage the data collection. Figure 3.3 shows a flow

diagram for the data collection process.

3.3.1 Focus Groups

Vaughn et al (1996) describes focus groups as particularly useful at an early stage of

research as a means for eliciting issues that participants think are relevant. These issues

can then inform design of a larger study. Two focus groups were undertaken as an

inductive, exploratory method of eliciting data with regards to how residents felt

towards Croydon and what issues they felt impacted its image both for them and for

others. Activities within the focus groups included a word association, which required

participants to write words on cards that they thought of when thinking about Croydon,

and a discussion around the various projects taking place. Appendix 1 shows the mind

maps constructed during one of the focus groups.

Focus groups allow conversation to flow and a variety of view points around

one issue to be explored (Morgan, 1996). Although the discussion was guided by topics

throughout the session, it was important for me to let participants speak for themselves

(Longhurst, 2010). On top of this, because I am familiar with the context of this study, I

had to ensure that I did not overlook particular points by referring straight to my own

heuristic understanding of Croydon (Laurier, 2010).

3.3.2 Semi-structured Interviews

Semi-structured interviews provided a richer insight into the issues raised in focus

groups. Indeed, Dunn (2010) states that interviews fill gaps in knowledge. Although

interviews and focus groups were undertaken alongside each other, the data gathered

from focus groups allowed me to better construct topics of discussion, which in turn

allowed me to elicit a more insightful response.

23

Two semi-structured interviews were undertaken with members of community

organisations in Croydon. These participants were chosen because their long term

standing in the community in Croydon, which made their insights very valuable to the

investigation. They are particularly positioned to say more about the wider issues facing

residents in Croydon. Interviews were recorded through note taking; the aim was to get

an overview of participants’ views and perceptions. Thus it was preferred to keep

interviews informal. Audio recording can sometimes heighten the formality of a

situation (Dunn, 2010), note taking allowed interviewees to be comfortable and fluid in

talking about their associations and perceptions with Croydon (see appendix 3 for notes

on interviews).

3.3.3 Questionnaire

The second stage of data collection involved the use of a questionnaire. Questionnaires

allow researchers to gather large amount of quantitative data (Parfitt, 2005). The design

was influenced by the outcomes of focus group and interview data. Appendix 4 details

the design of the questionnaire.

Place attachment measures were adapted from previous studies that had used

questionnaires as a means of measuring place attachment. Table 3.1 details each

question used and the sources of each. Two questions were asked for each of the 7

measures of the PPP-model, this was to combat sampling error, should any questions be

less valid in determining place attachment. 10 questions were chosen in order to assess

how residents’ perceptions of place image would be impacted by regeneration. These

questions were constructed from interview and focus group data that elicited insights

into key issues that residents felt impacted Croydon the most (see appendices 1, 2, 3).

Significant pre-testing and pilot testing took place in order to limit any validity

errors or general errors (McLafferty, 2010). This stage took a particularly long time.

24

Measure Questions Author

Person: Group - I am part of a strong community in

Croydon

- People like me live in Croydon

- Scannell and Gifford

(2010)

- Hidalgo (2013)

Person:

Individual

- Experiences in Croydon have made

me who I am today

- Parts of Croydon remind me of past

memories

- Author

- Author

Process: Affect - I am proud to say that I am from

Croydon

- I miss Croydon when I am away

- Scannell and Gifford

(2010)

- Jorgensen and

Stedman (2006)

Process:

Cognition

- I do not identify very strongly with

Croydon

- Croydon means a lot to me

- Kyle et al (2005)

- Williams and Vaske

(2003)

Process:

Behaviour

- If I could, I would prefer to spend

more time in Croydon

- I would like to move out of Croydon

- Williams (2000)

- Lewicka (2008)

Place: Social - The people I am attached to are

mostly from outside Croydon

- I do not feel integrated in my

neighbourhood

- Scopelliti and Tiberio

(2010)

- Bonaiuto et al (2003)

Place: Physical - I am attached to the cityscape of

Croydon

- I would be sorry if I and the people

who I appreciate in Croydon moved

out

- Hammitt et al (2006)

- Hidalgo and

Hernandez (2001)

Table 3.1: Questions used to measure place attachment and their sources.

25

The pre-testing showed that much of the wordings used did not address the correct

aspect of the measures used in the PPP-model. The pilot test made clear that too many

questions had been used in the first instance, resulting in few people actually

completing the questionnaire (McGuirk and O’Neill, 2010). Subsequently, the total

number of questions used was lowered to 24, excluding demographic data.

Demographic data was collected on age, gender, postcode and length of

residence in Croydon. These measures were to examine whether there was any

significant skew in the sample. The outcomes of this are discussed in section 4.

3.4 Data Sampling

Participants were found to take part in the focus groups via door-to-door recruitment.

This was a long and arduous process but allowed me to generate a balanced

Figure 3.4: Sites selected for door-to-door sampling. The red markers indicate sites whilst the star marks the town centre.

26

demographic for the focus groups. Interview participants were made aware to me

through door-to-door recruiting for focus groups.

As a former resident of Croydon I have a wide network of participants through

which I could disseminate the questionnaire. This network allowed me to increase the

number of participants, thus increasing the reliability of results (McGuirk and O’Neill,

2010). Participants were encouraged to pass on the questionnaire (via email) in order to

increase the sample through snowball sampling. Further sampling was stratified

geographically according to proximity to the Town Centre (see figure 3.4). Three

locations were selected, each no more than 1.5 miles from the town centre. 15 samples

were taken from each location. More respondents were anticipated from each location

but little cooperation was found through door-to-door sampling. Given greater time and

money resources, drop-and-collect methods may have elicited greater response rates.

3.5 Ethical Considerations

Throughout taking part in research respondents were made aware that they have the

right to withhold any information they deem too personal to disclose. Participants have

been given the ability to get in contact via email and telephone should they wish to ask

further questions, voice concern or withdraw from the study, rights that have been made

fully known (Hay, 2010).

Data has been kept under password protection; participants have remained

anonymous throughout the study and have been given pseudonyms to protect their

identity (Longhurst, 2010).

Participants have also been offered the opportunity to receive a copy of the

finished dissertation.

27

4. Results

This section presents the results of statistical tests undertaken on quantitative data

collected from questionnaire sampling. Statistical data is analysed with qualitative data

from interviews and focus groups in order to address the aims set out in section 1.1.

4.1 Descriptive Statistics

4.1.1 Sample Statistics

Table 4.1: Descriptive statistics for the sample population.

28

Table 4.1 summarises the demographic profile of the sample population, allowing me to

speculate whether the data is representative of the population. The sample is evenly

distributed among gender. There is significant skew with regard to the age range of the

sample; this is likely a result of sampling method. Whilst little can be said for the

population over 65, the sample can say more with regard to the working age population

which is 65.1% in the borough (Greater London Authority (GLA), 2015).

The Geographical distribution of the sample across postcode indicates that there

is spread across all postcodes of the Borough, with the majority of data coming from

CR0 and CR2 which was specified as part of the sampling strategy (see section 3.4).

There is a good distribution of data for length of residence, this is particularly

important in place attachment studies as length of residence has been shown to be

positively correlated; the longer a resident has lived in a place the more likely it is that

they are attached to it. The even spread will therefore limit any sampling bias, which

may cause there to be higher or lower place attachment scores relative to the true

population.

4.1.2 Place Attachment: Descriptive Statistics

Figure 4.1 shows the distribution of respondent place attachment scores alongside the

mean and standard deviation. The distribution is slightly positively skewed and

leptokurtic, indicating that the majority of place attachment scores and thus the mean

and median of the sample fell just below the midpoint (Place Attachment=3). Table 4.2

shows descriptive statistics for place attachment scores. The standard deviation

indicates that 68.2% of the sample population fall within ±0.598 of the mean place

attachment score. Table 4.3 shows that the sample population for place attachment is

normally distributed as the Shapiro-Wilk Test statistic is greater than the confidence

29

interval, thus failing to reject the null hypothesis H0= The sample population has a

normal distribution (α=0.05).

Figure 4.1: Distribution graph for place attachment scores.

Table 4.2: Descriptive data for place attachment scores.

30

4.1.3 Perceptions of Regeneration: Descriptive Statistics

Table 4.4 displays the frequencies for 10 questions targeting resident perceptions of

how urban regeneration will impact Croydon. The questions were compiled from focus

group and interview data that inductively sought to establish which issues were most

important to residents when considering their perceptions of Croydon. The frequencies

and sample distributions of these questions are not independently important when

considering the aims of this study; how these measures correlate to other responses is of

more importance, as is discussed in the following sections.

4.2 Testing the Usability of the PPP-Model

One aim of this study is to investigate the internal validity of the PPP-model. Scannell

and Gifford (2010) alongside others (see for example Hildalgo, 2013) call for the use of

the PPP-model in practice in order to advance the application of place attachment

theory. The results section necessarily begins by addressing this aim as further sections

build on the findings made here. The study will correlate place attachment with the

proxy measure length of residence. It will also carry out a factor analysis to assess how

well the measures used in the PPP-model can be explained by one component.

Table 4.3: Tests for the normality of the place attachment sample

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Question Responses Count Percentage I would be more proud to say I am from Croydon because of the regeneration taking place

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

21 34 28 11 1

22.1% 35.8% 29.5% 11.6% 1.1%

The regeneration will improve the reputation of Croydon

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

16 60 10 8 1

16.8% 63.2% 10.5% 8.4% 1.1%

I would spend more time in Croydon because of the regeneration taking place

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

9 47 22 17 0

9.5% 49.5% 23.2% 17.9%

0% The regeneration in Croydon will reduce crime and anti-social behaviour in the borough

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

2 14 25 37 17

2.1% 14.7% 26.3% 38.9% 17.9%

The regeneration would make the town centre look more attractive

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

21 68 4 2 0

22.1% 71.6% 4.2% 2.1% 0%

Regeneration would make Croydon a much more expensive place in which to live

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

29 40 23 3 0

30.5% 42.1% 24.2% 3.2% 0%

The benefits of regeneration will be short-lived

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

2 31 32 28 2

2.1% 32.6% 33.7% 29.5% 2.1%

Regeneration will be beneficial to local businesses

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

4 43 17 24 7

4.2% 45.3% 17.9% 25.3% 7.4%

The regeneration will bring communities closer together

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

0 15 25 38 17

0% 15.8% 26.3% 40%

17.9% This regeneration fits in with Croydon's heritage and the Borough's identity

Strongly agree Agree

Neither agree nor disagree Disagree

Strongly disagree

1 32 25 33 4

1.1% 33.7% 26.3% 34.7% 4.2%

Table 4.4: Frequency table for responses about issues concerning residents.

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4.2.1 Length of Residence

In order to examine whether the sample measures for place attachment are valid, it can

be correlated to length of residence as a proxy measure; academics have shown that

place attachment is positively correlated to length of residence (see section 2.4). Table

4.5 shows the correlation between place attachment and length of residence. The

correlation is moderately positive; indicating that as length of residence increases, so

too does place attachment to a moderate extent. This statistic is significant beyond the

95% confidence interval. Thus the PPP-model can be shown to be valid to moderate

extent. Whilst the correlation is not strong, it is high enough to show that there is some

validity in the use of the PPP-model.

4.2.2 Factor Analysis

A factor analysis is used to assess whether the measures for place attachment used in

the PPP-model can have a significant proportion of their variability explained by one

component. This study utilises a factor analysis in two regards, firstly to examine the

validity of the PPP-model in measuring place attachment and secondly to examine the

most important factors in place attachment in the context of urban regeneration (see

section 4.3.2). If all the measures load highly and positively onto one component then

Table 4.5: Correlation matrix: Place attachment and length of residence.

33

this component will likely be

indicative of place

attachment. Table 4.6 shows

the relative loadings of each

measure for place attachment

onto two extracted

components. Component 1

accounts for 45% of the

variance and has an

eigenvalue of 3.15. The

eigenvalue for component 2 is

below a score of 1 and thus

can be excluded from this analysis, figure 4.2 shows a scree plot indicating this result.

An orthogonal Varimax rotation is used, placing each variable at 90o in factorial space

during rotation in order to reduce variable correlation.

6 of the 7 measures used in the PPP-model load highly onto component 1,

indicating that an underlying factor is causing these variables to be strongly positively

correlated. Process: affect, place: physical and process: cognition all have very strong

positive loadings. Process: behaviour, person: group and person: individual have

strong positive loadings. One factor (place: social) shows almost no correlation to

component 1. This may be a result of questionnaire design error, as will be discussed in

section 4.3.2. The factor analysis indicates that the majority of measures correlate

strongly with component 1, which it can be said, is therefore indicative of place

attachment.

Table 4.6: A rotated component matrix for a factor analysis comprising of the measure of the PPP-model.

34

4.2.3 Summary

This study has sought to examine the validity of the PPP-model in the context of urban

regeneration. The study correlates place attachment scores with length of residence and

examines through an exploratory factor analysis how each measure of the PPP-model

loads onto one rotated component. The findings indicate that there is moderate strength

in the validity of the PPP-model; which correlates positively with one proxy measure

and shows that 6 of the 7 measures used load highly onto one underlying component

(which can be said to represent place attachment itself).

4.3 Exploring the Relationship between Place Attachment and How Residents

Perceive the Impacts of Urban Regeneration

The second aim of this study is to explore how place attachment correlates with how

residents perceive urban regeneration. The investigation uses bivariate correlation to

assess how well the two variables correlate. The study then uses a factor analysis to

explore the relative importance of each measure of the PPP-model.

4.3.1 Correlation Matrix

Table 4.7 shows the correlation matrix for place attachment and Response Score. The

correlation coefficient shows that place attachment has a moderate positive correlation

Table 4.7: Correlation matrix: Place attachment and response scores.

35

to response score. The significance statistic is 0.01, which exceeds the 95% confidence

interval, suggesting that the result is statistically significant. The correlation statistic is

0.343, a moderate positive correlation. There is some confidence in stating that as

resident place attachment rises, so too do positive perceptions of the impacts of urban

regeneration in Croydon. In the context of urban regeneration then, a way of addressing

and measuring the impacts of regeneration on the internal image of the city may be to

focus on place attachment.

4.3.2 Factor Analysis: Exploring the Measures of the PPP-Model

An exploratory factor analysis incorporating the 7 measures used in the PPP-model is

used in order to examine whether there is an underlying factor that influences the

variance of each measure. This section explores the relative importance of each measure

in the context of urban regeneration.

Table 4.6 shows how each measure of the PPP-model is explained by two

extracted components. As explained above, component 2 has been excluded, as it does

Figure 4.2: Model visualising the relative loadings of each measure of the PPP-model onto component 1 (place attachment).

36

not meet the requirement for an eigenvalue greater than 1. Component 1 details the

varying strength of association with each measure for the PPP-model. Figure 4.2 details

a model showing how each measure loads on to component 1. The subsequent sections

assess how each sub-section loads onto the PPP-model and in addition explores the

relative importance of each measure in determining place attachment. In order to better

correlate place attachment and how residents perceive the image of Croydon, an

analysis of how each measure of the model is influenced by regeneration is undertaken.

Process: Affect

This measure in the factor analysis loads highly onto component 1 (or place attachment,

see section 4.2.2) with a score of 0.836. This indicates that in the context of urban

regeneration, affect plays a significant role in influencing place attachment. Affect

relates to expressing emotion with regard to place, the questions used were as follows:

- I am proud to say that I am from Croydon,

- I miss Croydon when I am away.

Affect was a key theme in the focus groups. Indeed, pride was discussed on

several occasions and thus it is used as a measure in the response section (see table 3.2).

One participant explains:

“I always go into the ‘where are you from’ conversation with a defence”

(Group 2, participant 7)

This quote explains that the participant is hesitant to state to others that they are

from Croydon, or put another way; they are not proud to say they are from Croydon.

37

Further discussion reveals that Croydon suffers from a bad reputation. Whilst this is the

premise that calls for Croydon to be used as a location in this study, it also factors in

highly when considering pride and affect in relation to place attachment. Much of the

discussion centred on Croydon’s reputation as linked to so-called ‘stabbing jokes’,

‘anti-social behaviour’ and to the ‘2011 riots’. It seems that participants are hesitant to

link themselves to Croydon because of its bad reputation. This link is also prevalent in

considering the correlations between response items. Table 4.8 details the correlations

between response questions relating to increasing pride, improving the reputation and

reducing crime and anti-social behaviour. It is clear that they all have moderate to

strong positive correlations. This indicates that as crime and anti-social behaviour is

seen to decline, the reputation of Croydon will be seen to increase. Consequently, as

indicated from the focus groups, as the reputation of Croydon increases so too does

being proud to come from Croydon. Affect therefore is seen as a significantly

influential factor in place attachment in this context.

Place: Physical

The second measure that loads highly to place attachment is the place: physical

dimension, which had a component loading of 0.791. This measure relates to being

Table 4.8: Correlation matrix: Increasing pride, improving reputation, and reducing crime and anti-social behaviour.

38

attached to physical aspects of a place. This could relate to a particular street, park, area

or an architectural design for example. Hidalgo and Hernandez (2001) explain that the

physical attachment to place is important in place attachment studies, and further state

that this is most prominent at the city level. The prominence of this measure in

determining place attachment appears in focus group data, in which discussions

concerning the cityscape of Croydon considered a legacy of Brutalism in the Borough:

“…as I got older I realised how awful it looked, architecturally”

“There’s a baggage… which is the dreadful city planning that went ahead in the 60s

you know?”

(Group 1, participant 1)

Brutalism was a widespread

architectural style in the 1950s

and 1960s. Croydon saw much

growth in this time period;

much of its architecture was

built as part of the Brutalism

movement, and much of the

built environment today

remains as such (see figure

4.3). It is evident from the

quotes that the physical

landscape of the Borough has

a negative connotation. This

Figure 4.3: No.1 Tower, Croydon, an example of Brutalism architecture in Croydon. Source: Flickr, 2010.

39

negative connotation may have significantly reduced place attachment scores. For

Croydon then, a means of increasing place attachment and thus improving the internal

image of Croydon may be to improve the built environment. Examining table 4.4 it is

clear that 93.7% of respondents agree that regeneration will make the town centre more

attractive. Thus the aesthetics of a place are a significant influencer of place attachment.

Process: Cognition

This measure seeks to tackle the aspect of place attachment that links to memories,

beliefs and meanings associated with place. In this sense one becomes attached to place

as you have a personal connection with it. Indeed Scannell and Gifford (2010) draw on

Proshanky (1983) who identifies a real world personification of the self: or place

identity. This aspect had a loading of 0.713 onto place attachment, indicating a strong

positive loading. Thus respondents are more likely to be attached to Croydon if they

identify with Croydon. This entails that residents identify themselves as so-called

‘Croydonians’.

This theme was prevalent in focus group discussions, in which one participant

explains:

“I rarely say I’m from Croydon… either Surrey or London.”

(Focus Group 2, participant 1)

It is evident that this participant does not identify strongly with Croydon, choosing

rather to ‘be from’ Surrey or London. This participant, based on the factor analysis is

likely to have a lower place attachment. This dynamic links to pride and place

reputation, a similar dynamic to the process: affect measure. Table 4.8 shows the

significantly positive correlation between the reputation of Croydon and being proud to

40

be from Croydon. Anderson (2008) has discussed this dynamic. Residents may be less

willing to identify with Croydon because of its reputation, which residents may feel

influences their status. This directly links to the urban regeneration that is taking place

in Croydon, which seeks to improve the image of the Borough. Therefore this measure

is particularly important in determining place attachment in the context of urban

regeneration.

Process: Behaviour

Behaviour is a way for people to actively maintain a close relationship with a place to

which they are attached. For example, proximity maintenance is the process by which

people behave in ways that mean they are more often located in a place (Scannell and

Gifford, 2010). This aspect of place attachment has a loading of 0.657. This is a strong

positive loading, however this loading is fourth highest in terms of the other measures

used in the PPP-model. This result suggests that the more behaviour a person

undertakes that keeps them in a certain place, the more attached to that place they are.

Further qualitative analysis suggests that there is little to do in the Town Centre,

participants point to a lack of food outlets and unique shopping options:

“You’ve got all you chain stores but you’ve not got anything slightly different”

(Focus group 2, participant 1)

“They’ve got 3 Subways, but that’s about it. Plenty of fast food but no like restaurants”

(Focus group 2, participant 6)

Simply put, if residents felt there was more to do in Croydon, they may increase the

amount of time they spend in the Town Centre. Indeed this points to a long running

characterisation of Croydon as being a commuter town, a place to live, but not to visit.

41

Residents do however already spend a significant amount of time in Croydon simply by

living there. This perhaps goes deeper as despite living there, residents may not spend

more time than they need to in Croydon:

“For shopping I’d much rather go to Bromley or Bluewater [nearby shopping

centres]”

(Focus group 2, participant 3)

Urban regeneration is specifically attempting to address this, BoxPark Croydon aims to

increase food options in the Town Centre and the Hammerson/Westfield Partnership

seeks to renew Croydon’s legacy for retail and leisure. Thus creating options for people

to spend more time in Croydon itself can increase place attachment.

Person: Group

This measure has significant similarity to the place: social measure. The two are

distinguished from one another by Hidalgo (2013) who refers to person: group as

distinctly about a group of similar people identifying with a place whilst place: social

refers more to an individual’s feelings towards the social contexts of a place. The

person: group measure loads onto place attachment positively with a score of 0.609.

This indicates that as respondents have higher group attachment to place, their overall

place attachment rises. Scannell and Gifford (2010) consider this aspect of place

attachment as a form of cultural identification with place.

In place branding, practitioners seek to give distinctiveness to place. Relph

(2014: quoted in UNSW, 2014) explains that ‘place’ is somewhere that is distinctive

from other places, whereas a ‘placeless’ place is so if it is indistinguishable from others.

Being placeless is not always negative, as Relph continues; sameness implies

42

cosmopolitanism, whereas distinctive places can exhibit exclusion, consider for

example creative city branding and gentrification (see section 2.2) (Vivant, 2013;

Foord, 2013). Croydon is perceived as a diverse area:

“It’s exceptionally diverse can I put it that way and I think if you were to do the

rankings it would be up there as probably number 1”

(Focus group 1, participant 1)

Whilst Croydon is no more diverse than any other borough in London (ONS, 2014), it is

perceived as being so. Urban regeneration has the potential to give places a brand or

identity, making them distinct, thus creating exclusion. For Croydon, its identity comes

from diversity, branding the Borough as a Tech City for example may lead to the

exclusion of some groups. Thus urban regeneration has a significant impact on this

measure of place attachment.

Person: Individual

This measure seeks to examine how place plays an important part in personal

milestones, memories and realisations, it has a positive loading onto place attachment,

scoring 0.585. This is a strong positive loading, however is not a strong as other

measures. It is difficult for urban regeneration to have a significant influence on this

measure because it is to a large extent retrospective; respondents will score more highly

if they have had more significant past experiences in Croydon. Therefore research that

investigates place attachment in the context of urban regeneration may wish to exclude

this measure. However as the factor analysis shows it is still a significant determinant of

general place attachment.

43

Place: Social

Somewhat surprisingly, the place: social measure had virtually no loading on

component 1, scoring 0.079 in the factor analysis. This comes as a surprise primarily

because much of the discourse focuses on the importance of social rootedness in place,

but also because it features so prominently in interviews. This measure seeks to explore

social ties in place. The low scoring may be a result of questionnaire design error. The

questions used in the questionnaire to address this measure are:

- The people I am attached to are mostly from outside Croydon,

- I do not feel integrated in my neighbourhood.

The questions used may have limited the validity of this measure. Note that both

questions are phrased negatively. This was done to ensure that participants did not

simply respond uniformly throughout the questionnaire, however by human error both

questions used to address this measure were selected to be negatively worded. Doing so

in this context may have resulted in respondents giving two neutral scores for the

measure, as fewer residents may be able to agree with certainty that most people they

are attached to are from outside Croydon, than those who are more certain that the

people whom they are attached to definitely are from Croydon. Thus a questionnaire

design error may have resulted in more respondents giving neutral responses.

Interview participant 1 notes a gradual ‘decline in community over time’.

Furthermore, focus group data reveals that:

“It’s a commuter town, I don’t go into Croydon unless I need to get something or go

somewhere”

(Focus group 2, participant 2)

44

It is perhaps evident that opportunities for social bonding are few. Scannell and Gifford

(2010) make the distinction between communities of interest and communities of place,

communities of interest tend to form around sharing a pastime whereas communities of

place are founded in co-location. A gradual decline in communities of place in Croydon

seems to be prevalent, rather than communities forming around co-location, residents

tend to commute to other places. The result indicating a neutral loading for this measure

on place attachment may be a result of two options: firstly, of design error, and

secondly, it may be apparent that ‘community’ means less to residents of Croydon. This

is a sweeping conclusion; the reason for this outcome is likely the former rather than the

later. This study therefore can not conclude with any certainty on the significance of

this measure in determining place attachment. However the importance of community

of place is noted in place attachment discourse (Scannell and Gifford, 2010).

Furthermore, all interviewees, as part of community groups themselves, stress the

importance of taking part in the social sphere of Croydon. There is perhaps more to be

said for the importance of the place: social measure of the PPP-model.

4.3.3 Summary

This section has sought to evaluate the role for place attachment as a concept in

exploring the impacts urban regeneration has on the internal image of the city. Through

a bivariate correlation of place attachment output and the proxy measure of length of

residence, this study finds that place attachment can be used because the two are

moderately positively correlated. A further examination reveals that the measures used

in the PPP-model can be ranked on their relative influence on place attachment. Each

component can be influenced by urban regeneration and thus place attachment can be

seen as a potential metric for exploring the impact of urban regeneration on the internal

image of Croydon.

45

5. Discussion

This section will consolidate the findings of this study with reference to the aims set out

in section 1.1, considering their implications. The limitations are also discussed in the

context of these findings.

5.1 Assessing the Usability of the PPP-model

• To assess the usability of the Person-Place-Process Model,

• How well does the PPP-model output correlate to proxy measures for

place attachment?

• Is each measure within the PPP-model significantly explained by one

component in a factor analysis?

The PPP-model was developed in order to advance the application of place attachment

theory. It consolidates the work of academics that have sought to create a model for

measuring the social phenomena (Scannell and Gifford, 2010). This study has sought to

apply the PPP-model to the context of urban regeneration in order to examine its

usability in a new context.

The validity of the PPP-Model is discussed in section 4.2. The model is found to

be a good measure of place attachment, as the output correlates positively with the

proxy measure of length of residence, which is seen to increase with higher place

attachment. Furthermore, a factor analysis of the measures of the PPP-Model reveals

that each measure loads highly onto one component (excluding 1 measure). As most

measures have strong positive influence on this component, it is possible to conclude

that this component refers to place attachment, meaning that the measures of the PPP-

model are valid. There is some consideration in this findings however, as the correlation

46

to length of residence is only moderate. Whilst this is promising it is not high enough to

confirm beyond doubt that the PPP-model is valid, further testing is needed.

In terms of the overall usability, assessing 7 measures proves difficult because in

order to maintain a high level of validity, it is appropriate to ask more than one

question. Two questions were used for each measure in determining place attachment;

this gave some confidence in the outcomes (with the exception of one measure, see

section 4.3.2), however asking more questions for each measure would have ensured

higher validity. There are limits to the amount of questions that can be used without

incentivising participants (see section 3.3.3). Therefore further research may choose to

focus solely on determining place attachment using the PPP-model in order to allow for

more questions to be used. Urban regeneration has a less significant influence on the

person: individual component because this measure is largely retrospective and based

on past experiences. Excluding this measure from the model in researching place

attachment in the context of urban regeneration will reduce the total number of

questions needed, meaning more could be used per measure.

Whilst there is some degree of validity in using the PPP-model, the findings in

this study are not based solely on the model alone. Qualitative methods provide a

valuable richness to place attachment studies. Lewicka (2011) calls for the continued

importance of qualitative methods in place attachment research and even the

advancement of these methods. Whilst pursuing the application of quantitative place

attachment models is worthwhile, especially in the context of urban regeneration,

greater insight is only available through its development alongside the use of qualitative

methods. Focus group and interview data provide valuable insights into the mechanics

of each measure of the model in considering Croydon as a case study. This study would

have benefitted from further in depth qualitative analysis.

47

5.2 Place Attachment and Urban regeneration

• To examine the role place attachment can play in examining how the internal

image of the city is impacted by urban regeneration.

• Does place attachment correlate positively with resident perceptions of

the impacts of urban regeneration?

• Which measures of the PPP-model are most significant in the context of

urban regeneration?

5.2.1 Place Attachment as a Metric for the Internal Image of the City

The main aim of this study was to assess the role place attachment could play in

examining how the internal image of the city is impacted by urban regeneration. As

discussed in section 2, urban regeneration often seeks to appeal to an external audience

in order to attract investment, building an external image. However the internal image

is increasingly neglected, many academics point to the importance of appealing to an

internal audience (i.e. residents) in improving the overall image of place (Colomb and

Kalandides, 2010). Place attachment could thus be seen as a way of measuring how

internal audiences (particularly residents) perceive the image of the city.

Correlating place attachment and how residents perceive regeneration will

impact Croydon tests this hypothesis. The bivariate correlation reveals that there is

moderate positive correlation between the two measures, indicating that as place

attachment increases so too do positive outlooks on the impacts of regeneration (see

figure 5.1). That is not to say that this is a one-way correlation. In order to validate the

hypothesis stated above, it must be noted that response optimism also predicts place

attachment. The distinction is that instead of one predicting the other, they are mutually

correlated. Therefore a way for academics to investigate how urban regeneration

impacts the internal image of the city is to use place attachment as a metric.

48

Whilst this is a meaningful finding, the investigation takes caution, as the

correlation is only moderately strong. There is some evidence to believe that place

attachment could be a suitable measure in this context, further research can support or

contest this finding. As shown in section 4.1 there is some sampling error in this study;

the distribution among age is skewed. Moreover, although the sample size is large

enough to warrant confidence in parametric testing, a larger sample could further

increase the reliability, especially considering the size of the population.

5.2.2 Some Measures are More Significant Than Others

Through a factor analysis, the relative importance of each measure of the PPP-model is

found. The relative importance of each measure of place attachment means that some

Figure 5.1: Graph indicating the positive correlation between place attachment and perceptions of the impacts of urban regeneration.

49

have a more significant impact than others. These findings indicate that in the context of

urban regeneration place attachment studies may seek to focus on measures with a

greater significance. Furthermore, urban regeneration strategies can target certain facets

of place attachment in order to improve the internal image of Croydon.

The study finds that process: affect, place: physical and process: cognition

measures load the most strongly onto place attachment. This finding indicates that place

attachment, in the context of urban regeneration, is particularly influenced by how

residents feel emotionally towards a place, how they perceive it aesthetically and how

highly they identify with Croydon. These three may be more interlinked than they seem.

The analysis discusses the role of pride as an affective link to Croydon. Pride appears to

be linked to the reputation of Croydon. More specifically, pride is linked to how

residents feel others perceive the reputation of Croydon: the self-reflecting image

(Anderson, 2008). Residents may feel more proud to say they are from Croydon if they

feel it is more widely respected. Not only this but residents may be more willing to

identify with Croydon if it was held in higher esteem. Croydon, as identified in section

3.1 has a reputation for unattractive architecture. Indeed the architecture is iconic

(Watts, 2015; Warnaby and Medway, 2013). Thus the built environment is bound up

with the image of Croydon and therefore how proud residents are to say they are from

Croydon or to what extent they identify with the Borough.

Process: behaviour, person: group and person: individual have significant

loadings onto place attachment. Although they are not as significant as those mentioned

above, they still have a strong influence on place attachment. This result indicates that if

a respondent spends more time in Croydon, if they have more personal experiences in

Croydon or if their cultural group identifies particularly strongly with the Borough, then

they will be more place attached. The process: behaviour and person: groups measures

are seen to be influenced by urban regeneration, they are thus significant in exploring

50

place attachment in this context. However the person: individual component is largely

retrospective, formed and influenced by personal milestones and memories linked to

place. Thus urban regeneration can not have a significant influence on it. As explained

above, further studies of place attachment in the context of urban regeneration may wish

to omit this measure from the investigation. It is nonetheless still shown to be a

significant factor in determining place attachment.

A curious finding of this study is the weakness of the place: social measure on

place attachment. This is surprising because the role of social attachment is emphasised

in place attachment discourse. Although statistically speaking, this measure is shown to

be of little to no importance (a result may or may not have been influenced by

questionnaire design error), qualitative data reveals the importance of the social sphere

in place attachment studies. The continued work of community actors in Croydon is

exemplary of their personal attachment to the Borough and statistical evidence does not

do justice in demonstrating this. Further research is thus needed to evaluate the role of

social components of place attachment in the context of urban regeneration.

These measures can be targeted to greater or lesser extents in urban regeneration

projects. In improving the internal image of the city, strategies may wish to focus on

increasing civic pride or cooperating with residents to improve the appearance of the

city.

51

6. Conclusion

The literature on urban regeneration and place branding highlights the commonplace

oversight of internal voices of the city and the contestation by local residents of place

brands (Hall and Barrett, 2012; Colomb and Kalandides, 2010). Through place

attachment, scholars may be able to examine in-depth the impact of urban regeneration

and place branding schemes on the internal image of the city. This finding is in need of

further investigation; nonetheless there is some significance in this conclusion.

Through the use of the PPP-model, the most significant measures of place

attachment are revealed. The relative importance of each measure within the model is

examined. Further research into place attachment in the context of urban regeneration

may seek to specifically examine the measures that this study finds as the most

significant, including affective bonds with place (e.g. pride), perceptions of the physical

aesthetics of place or how well residents identify with place. Urban regeneration

schemes may also seek to target specific aspects of place attachment so that they may

better address issues relating to the internal image of the city. In this context, one key

shortcoming of this study is the potential misrepresentation of the social dynamics of

place attachment. Whilst statistical evidence shows that these dynamics have little

impact on place attachment, qualitative data contests this notion. Academic discourse

finds that social spheres of place are a key factor in place attachment; more research

needs to be done in determining the role of the social context of place in urban

regeneration and place attachment. Given this shortcoming, greater stringency on

questionnaire design would have enhanced the reliability of findings.

The PPP-model has validity in measuring place attachment; this also needs

further examination, as there is also only moderate correlation between model output

and proxy measures. It is hoped that this study contributes to advancing place

attachment research. Further research to test the validity of the PPP-model may seek to

52

do this in isolation of other research objectives. The model employs 7 different

measures for place attachment, making it difficult to ask enough questions to validate

the investigation without incentivising respondents. Testing the validity of the model in

isolation would have allowed more questions to be used, thus increasing the

significance of findings.

This study seeks to continue a tradition in urban geography for the rigorous use

of empirical methods. It has also seeks to employ qualitative methods in order to

facilitate a richer understanding of place attachment as a wholly subjective people-place

relationship. The rich data that can be elicited through qualitative methods in place

attachment research provide deeper insight into the concept. Whilst contributing to the

progress of models that seek to quantitatively measure place attachment is worthwhile,

the importance of these qualitative methods is highlighted.

Given the limitations of the investigation, there is still much that can be said for

place attachment in the context of urban regeneration. The results are promising,

indicating that place attachment may go a long way in revealing how urban regeneration

interacts with the internal image of the city and how residents perceive their hometown.

53

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Appendix 1

Focus Group Worksheets

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Appendix 2

Partial Transcript: Focus Group 1 Focus Group Transcript

What do you guys think of Croydon?

D: so the current perceptions

What do you think of the area?

T: Highly underrated, 3rd largest financial concentration in living after the City and Canary

Wharf yet it is considered to be some sort of desolate hell hole

(Laughter. T)

It does seem to have that kind of reputation hasn’t it

T: yes

So you say its underrated I've not yet heard anyone say its underrated yet that’s interesting, I’ve

had a lot of people say bad things about it. I think personally that’s quite a positive thing

Prompt other participants

E: I arrived here 3 months ago so there isn't much I can say positive things. But that it is quite

different from Nice, there are lots of parks a nice street market lots of different markets, stores, I

can say erm only positive things about Croydon its not too far from the centre of London from

waterloo station where I will be working so for me its erm.

D: I think that the, just on that topic I think that all London boroughs have a problem with

identity so so and err I suppose the history and the baggage of Croydon... which is the erm

dreadful erm city planning that went ahead in the 60s you know? From the tower blocks and

offices which because of the shortages of constructions so it was sort of like an overspill for

financial services because they couldn’t build in the city yep? The Burgermasters obviously

took advantage of that opportunity and obviously shipped people out to as you call it in France

the suburbs. Where there are huge social problems in the last few decades which have sort of

subsided yeah? But but so I think that he perception of Croydon would depend on what age

group and who you were talking to. So I think that’s one thing to take point, I think for my age

group I’m sort of sixty... sixty-six now yep. Would be that erm I remember when it was very

vibrant, because it was very new and individual. Very very vibrant. I didn’t really notice that it

was ugly.

66

(laughter)

D: as I got older I realized how awful it looked, you know architecturally, it its built

environment visually was horrendous and then I suppose in a sense err the nature of the type of

tenants that would go into such buildings presumably tended to be the public sector. So so the

public sector so very very strongly represented in the east Croydon

Tower blocks you know, from the home office to err other public services you know you’ve got

lunar house. The will be a lot of people who know Croydon just for lunar house now. You know

so I think it depends who you’re talking to. So so I would say that one of things about Croydon

erm common with some boroughs but exceptional in Croydon is the diversity of the population.

Because you’ve got 330,000 people roughly. And I think that people from, if you were to do the

search on census data yep? Its something like its got 35% erm people who were born outside of,

outside to the UK so very diverse. You just when I go through Croydon today compared to in

the past I would say the vibrancy of its diversity rather than technology is what stands out. So

that’s why I was questioning your premise jack. So so erm so that would be the thing I notice, I

notice it on my road I notice it when I go anywhere in Croydon I notice it when visitors come

and stay with us you know. They say ‘god every nationality’ you know so even though you’ve

got London ye I think its particularly , its exceptionally diverse can I put it that way and I think

if you were to do the rankings it would be up there as probably number 1.

T: I’ve been living here a couple of years and when I go home I find it a bit boring, I come from

Hertfordshire from the sticks and its just all white English and

D: yes that’s right T: and everybody has the same accent and is from the same economic

background. (general laughter)

D: it used to be a borough like all the other outer boroughs you know the white middle class and

then you’d have the inner side which was more ethnic minorities like the north side of Croydon.

But now is sort of like pssh you know, so it doesn’t matter whether you’re in seldom or in

purley or in temple road Croydon or in south Croydon you just walk the street you hear this

ballad of accents and cultures you know? Which is very exciting I enjoy it. So so I that’s the

thing that would be the, that would strike me as the erm something positive

So when you think Croydon you think.. erm multiculturalism?

D: well I don’t know whether that Is the word, I think that word has some old baggage you

know. I carries a lot of baggage doesn’t it? Where people are separate but not interacting with

one another, quite separate but b u term but erm yeah you go to other boroughs in London and

it’s a dominance of one particular group you know. Kensington it’s the French.

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E: (laughs)

D: D: or you go to tower hamlets and its Pakistani and Bangladeshi you know what I mean?

But you cant really say, I think that Croydon is very diverse. That’s what I think you know

when, that there’s no dominant group

But you cant really say, E; I notice that so I completely agree.

I think that Croydon is very diverse. That’s what I think you know

when, that there’s no dominant group

D: so you know you go to shoreditch and you’ve got he hipsters you know and dalston where

my son works

Oh what does he do?

D: and he works in production, in animation in Soho. So but erm but they’ve e adopted that

area. A lot of the media, hipster types so I don’t know, whether its really right start thinking of it

in hipster terms

T: the population’s an interesting subject to talk about as well. The rental market in crayoned is

insane its mainly people renting. I’ve looked at the stats before I cant remember them exactly

but its worth looking up. You see that developments going in at saffron square and its all

apartments. Its all just people being packed into the centre of Croydon

(agreement, D)

D: I think that the probably the one of the things to be carful of in the future is as you said

there’s a across the street there’s a flat you know a house on our road which has been turned

into two flats you know what I mean but because of the enterprising nature

T: its now four flats (Laughs) D: you know I noticed a van the other day delivering a mattress...

(everyone laughs) T: and they didn’t take the old one away (chuckles)

D: exactly, and this happens the other week before with 3 or 4 new mattresses, and then there’s

another one. And that’s just people being very entrepreneurial. And saying look the rents are so

high you know, we cope somehow you know

T: yep there’s a thing people do as well is that with a terraced house they split it in two and they

end up with two separate properties and they then rent it to individual people. If you go around

the east Croydon cherry orchard way route

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D: yeah the council are doing something about that they’re introducing on the 1st October a

system of multiple occupation

(everyone nods and voices awareness) D: its been abused by several landlords T: rents (makes

crescendo whistle noise) go straight up D: what? T: the regulations will improve the housing

stock and improve living standards but it’ll

make the rents go higher

D: yeah yeah...

T: so suddenly you have all these landlords being shut down for improper use, the bottom end

of the market will just disappear

D: so I’m sorry if I questioned your premise

Not at all, its good to have it challenged

D: I know I know that there’s an agenda about tech city and tech Croydon and so on but I mean

I’m so stuck by participants saying financial services, you know insurance was well known you

know Croydon was a place for insurance wasn’t it?

T: yeah, D: wasn’t it? You [tom] would know about that industry I don’t know anything about it

T: I would say that LV are based here because of the technology base that they can poach from

London. That’s why they have an office here. With contractors who work in central London,

you can be there in half an hour.

D: you’ve got that big company at err erm we all heard about in the crash AIG, up the road

opposite the station. That was sort of like a huge organization AIG,

[mumbling not understood]

D: but what I think is the opportunity for croydon in the future is erm to try and erm not just be

erm a place where people, as a dormitory for London, I think there’s a danger as the office

blocks are being converted to apartment blocks. Yeah. The bt block is being done, there are

already applications as people are sod separate to get some economic development they

panicked yeah. I think they want to make a lot of shared accommodation

D: but I do think there’s something to the tech IT thing because Croydon was one of the

to erm take a back seat to come in you had the US companies coming in yeah they dug up the

pavements and they lost a lot of money in investments. So I think that the infrastructure if you

were to look it has to potential to be way in advance of many places and I believe shoreditch has

69

huge problems with erm because its still with BT you know it uses the copper wire. There are

lots of people complaining in shoreditch. I don’t know if this would be the case in croydon

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Appendix 3

Semi-Structured Interview Notes: interview 1

71

72

Semi-Structured Interview Notes: interview 2

73

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Appendix 4

Questionnaire Design

21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

Page 1 of 8https://docs.google.com/forms/d/11egCrPZ-6kYDz78eArHfEnmNATIikIY8ZnyW4I8FFo4/printform

Place Attachment and Regeneration in CroydonMy name is Jack, I am a student studying Geography at the University of Exeter. This survey relates to urban regeneration and how residents feel about how it influences where they live. The information you provide is very important to my research.

Any information you give will remain confidential, stored electronically under password protection. You have the right to withdraw from the study at any time, without giving reason, and can do so simply by contacting me at any point. Any data used in the publication of this study will remain anonymous.

I would be privileged if you would like to receive a copy of the finished dissertation. If so, please leave your email at the end of this survey and I will ensure that one is sent to you after submission in April 2016.

Should you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact me via email: [email protected].

Or should you wish to contact my supervisor, you can do so by contacting Neil Adger via: [email protected].

Thank you for taking the time to be part of my research.

* Required

1. I can confirm that I have read the above statement and agree to take part in the study *Check all that apply.

Yes, I have read the above statement

Place Attachment and Regeneration in CroydonFirstly, please answer the following questions about how you feel towards Croydon:

21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

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2. Please state whether you agree or disagree with the following statements aboutCroydon: *Mark only one oval per row.

Stronglydisagree Disagree Neither agree nor

disagree Agree Stronglyagree

I am proud to say that Iam from CroydonI am part of a strongcommunity in CroydonIf I could, I would preferto spend more time inCroydonThe people I amattached to are mostlyfrom outside CroydonI am attached to thecityscape of CroydonI do not identify verystrongly with CroydonExperiences in Croydonhave made me who I amtoday

Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

3. Please state whether you agree or disagree with the following statements aboutCroydon: *Mark only one oval per row.

Stronglydisagree Disagree Neither agree nor

disagree Agree Stronglyagree

I miss Croydon when Iam awayPeople like me live inCroydonI would like to move outof CroydonI do not feel integrated inmy neighbourhoodI would be sorry if I andthe people who Iappreciate in Croydonmoved outCroydon means a lot tomeParts of Croydon remindme of past memories

Regeneration in CroydonPlease take a couple of minutes to read about 3 projects taking place in Croydon before answering 10 quick questions below:

Westfield/Hammerson Shopping Centre

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21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

Page 2 of 8https://docs.google.com/forms/d/11egCrPZ-6kYDz78eArHfEnmNATIikIY8ZnyW4I8FFo4/printform

2. Please state whether you agree or disagree with the following statements aboutCroydon: *Mark only one oval per row.

Stronglydisagree Disagree Neither agree nor

disagree Agree Stronglyagree

I am proud to say that Iam from CroydonI am part of a strongcommunity in CroydonIf I could, I would preferto spend more time inCroydonThe people I amattached to are mostlyfrom outside CroydonI am attached to thecityscape of CroydonI do not identify verystrongly with CroydonExperiences in Croydonhave made me who I amtoday

Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

3. Please state whether you agree or disagree with the following statements aboutCroydon: *Mark only one oval per row.

Stronglydisagree Disagree Neither agree nor

disagree Agree Stronglyagree

I miss Croydon when Iam awayPeople like me live inCroydonI would like to move outof CroydonI do not feel integrated inmy neighbourhoodI would be sorry if I andthe people who Iappreciate in Croydonmoved outCroydon means a lot tomeParts of Croydon remindme of past memories

Regeneration in CroydonPlease take a couple of minutes to read about 3 projects taking place in Croydon before answering 10 quick questions below:

Westfield/Hammerson Shopping Centre 21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

Page 3 of 8https://docs.google.com/forms/d/11egCrPZ-6kYDz78eArHfEnmNATIikIY8ZnyW4I8FFo4/printform

Westfield and Hammerson, two shopping centre groups have agreed to co-develop a new £1.5 billion shopping centre to replace the Whitgift Centre. A compulsory purchase order has been put in place, the demolition of the Whitgift Centre is due to start in 2016 and will last for a number of years.

It is thought that the development will regenerate Croydon's retail centre, which has long seen to be in decline. 5,000 jobs will be created, new leisure facilities and 600 new homes (including affordable housing) will also be constructed.

BoxPark Croydon

BoxPark is a pop-up shopping mall that has found much success in Shoreditch. BoxPark is made of refurbished shipping containers that house independent start-up businesses, it is thought that this acts as a launchpad for small medium entreprises and encourages growth and entrepreneurialism. The mall will be based on Ruskin Square, next to East Croydon Station and will open in June 2016.

The theme for BoxPark Croydon is food, the site will host 30-40 independent food start-ups alongside a few major brands. Over 200 entertainment events will be hosted there each year, hoping to make BoxPark a place for casual dining and socialising.

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21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

Page 4 of 8https://docs.google.com/forms/d/11egCrPZ-6kYDz78eArHfEnmNATIikIY8ZnyW4I8FFo4/printform

Croydon Tech City

Croydon Tech City is an independent community of entrepreneurs who have come together to create a growing cluster of creative and tech based start-ups and businesses that operate from within Croydon. They are rapidly turning Croydon into a hotspot for the tech industry. The community offers business opportunities for potential start ups, support and expertise to small tech businesses and workspace in the form of hot-desking (renting a desk for short periods) and also through underused office space around Croydon.

Croydon Tech City engages in tech-based educational programmes in schools, developing STEM skills (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) and entrepreneurial skills in Croydon’s young people. They host networking events for residents of Croydon, they host community classes and talks from industry professionals. Croydon Tech City aims to promote the Borough as a centre for tech start-ups and entrepreneurialism.

21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

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Finally, please answer the following 10 questions:

4. I would be more proud to say I am from Croydon because of the regeneration takingplace *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

5. The regeneration will improve the reputation of Croydon *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

77

21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

Page 5 of 8https://docs.google.com/forms/d/11egCrPZ-6kYDz78eArHfEnmNATIikIY8ZnyW4I8FFo4/printform

Finally, please answer the following 10 questions:

4. I would be more proud to say I am from Croydon because of the regeneration takingplace *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

5. The regeneration will improve the reputation of Croydon *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

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6. I would spend more time in Croydon because of the regeneration taking place *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

7. The regeneration in Croydon will reduce crime and anti-social behaviour in the borough*Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

8. The regeneration would make the town centre look more attractive *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

9. Regeneration would make Croydon a much more expensive place in which to live *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

78

21/03/2016, 17:29Place Attachment and Regeneration in Croydon

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10. The benefits of regeneration will be short-lived *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

11. Regeneration will be beneficial to local businesses *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

12. The regeneration will bring communities closer together *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

13. This regeneration fits in with Croydon's heritage and the Borough's identity *Mark only one oval.

Strongly disagree

Disagree

Neither agree nor disagree

Agree

Strongly agree

About YouThank you for filling out the survey.

Lastly, please provide some information about yourself.

14. What is your age?

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Powered by

15. What is your gender?Mark only one oval.

Male

Female

Other:

16. What is your postcode? (e.g. CR7, CR2)

17. What is your current occupation?

18. How long have you lived in Croydon? (tothe nearest year)

19. What is your email address? (This is onlynecessary if you would like to receive acopy of the finished study)

20. If you have any further details that you feel are relevant to the study, or have anycomments or feedback, please write them below

80

Appendix 5

Consent Form Template (Example shown is for a focus group)

Participant Consent Form for Undergraduate Dissertation Study

Croydon’s Facelift: Exploring the Impact of Urban Regeneration on Levels of Place

Attachment Among Residents Researcher: Jack Waterman Email: Tel:

Dissertation Supervisor:

Email:

My name is Jack and I am an undergraduate student studying Geography at the

University of Exeter. For my dissertation I have chosen to investigate how forms of

urban regeneration change how attached people feel to the places in which they live.

Several projects are currently taking place in Croydon and this study hopes to explore

how they will change the way residents see and feel towards the Borough.

By taking part in this study you will be invited to a one hour-long focus group in which

we will broadly discuss how you see and feel towards Croydon at the moment.

Any information you give will remain confidential, stored electronically under

password protection. You have the right to withdraw, without giving reason, from the

study simply by contacting me at any point. Any quotes or other data used in the

publication of this study will remain anonymous.

I would be privileged if you would like to receive a copy of the finished dissertation. If

so, please leave your email or home address below and I will ensure that one is sent to

you after submission on the 27th April 2016.

If you have any further questions then please do not hesitate to contact me using the

contact details above.

Thank you for considering taking part in my research and I look forward to speaking

with you.

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Please tick the box corresponding to each: I agree to take part in the project, which will involve being part of a focus group. I have been given the opportunity to ask questions about this project. I understand that my participation is voluntary and that I can withdraw at anytime without giving reason. I understand that the information I give will remain confidential and that any quotes used in publication will be anonymous. I agree to the focus group being audio recorded. Name of Participant Date Signature Name of Researcher Date Signature