Abstract
This study focuses on residents’ perceptions of residential quality concerning 23 different dwelling aspects. Respondents
were asked to indicate their appreciation of these dwelling aspects on a scale ranging from 0 (“extremely unattractive”) to
100 (“extremely attractive”). The influence of two potential factors on the appreciation of dwelling aspects is examined:
(1) preference and (2) experience. It was hypothesized that residents who live according to their preferences give higher
appreciation scores than residents who do not. This should even apply to low-quality housing. Furthermore, it was argued that
residents appreciate their current housing situation more than residents who do not live in that particular housing situation.
This effect should be independent of preference. The impact of both preference and of experience could be confirmed. The results
also showed an interaction effect between preference and experience: the positive effect of experience on appreciation is
larger in residents who live in a housing situation that they do not prefer. This result would be expected if the impact of
experience works to decrease the ‘gap’ in residential satisfaction due to the discrepancy between what residents have and
what they want. In conclusion, why is housing always satisfactory? In this paper, housing is satisfactory because the ‘gap’
between what residents want and what they have is small; residents seem to have realistic aspirations. Furthermore, residents
appreciate what they already have, even if this is not what they prefer.
were asked to indicate their appreciation of these dwelling aspects on a scale ranging from 0 (“extremely unattractive”) to
100 (“extremely attractive”). The influence of two potential factors on the appreciation of dwelling aspects is examined:
(1) preference and (2) experience. It was hypothesized that residents who live according to their preferences give higher
appreciation scores than residents who do not. This should even apply to low-quality housing. Furthermore, it was argued that
residents appreciate their current housing situation more than residents who do not live in that particular housing situation.
This effect should be independent of preference. The impact of both preference and of experience could be confirmed. The results
also showed an interaction effect between preference and experience: the positive effect of experience on appreciation is
larger in residents who live in a housing situation that they do not prefer. This result would be expected if the impact of
experience works to decrease the ‘gap’ in residential satisfaction due to the discrepancy between what residents have and
what they want. In conclusion, why is housing always satisfactory? In this paper, housing is satisfactory because the ‘gap’
between what residents want and what they have is small; residents seem to have realistic aspirations. Furthermore, residents
appreciate what they already have, even if this is not what they prefer.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-21
- DOI 10.1007/s11205-012-0114-9
- Authors
- Sylvia J. T. Jansen, OTB Research Institute for the Built Environment, Delft University of Technology, PO Box 5030, 9600 GA Delft, The Netherlands
- Journal Social Indicators Research
- Online ISSN 1573-0921
- Print ISSN 0303-8300