shopsteading
English
Noun
shopsteading (uncountable)
- The sale by the government of abandoned shops to entrepreneurs who are willing to renovate them and operate there, as part of an urban revitalization policy.
- 1991 December 10, Steven C Deller, James C McConnon Jr, John Holden & Kenneth Stone, “The measurement of a community's retail market”, in Journal of the Community Development Society:
- The policy tools range from land banking and infrastructure provision to townscaping and shopsteading (Stokvis, 1984; Blakely, 1989).
- 1997, Robert E. Stipe & Antoinette Josephine Lee, The American Mosaic: Preserving a Nation's Heritage, →ISBN, page 127:
- It was such a success in Baltimore, Maryland, that the city expanded the concept in 1977 to create shopsteading.
- 2010, Carol O'Cleireacain, The Orphaned Capital, →ISBN:
- Low-cost financing, access to venture capital, expanding shopsteading programs, and providing fee waivers are some productive approaches.
- 2010, Edward J. Blakely & Nancey Green Leigh, Planning Local Economic Development: Theory and Practice, →ISBN:
- The success of shopsteading hinges on two main factors, the first of which is the availability of vacant properties in areas that have considerable potential for economic revitalization.
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