Volume 19, Issue 4
Volume 19, Issue 3
The Decline of Older, Inner Suburbs in Metropolitan America
Greater Cleveland's First Suburbs Consortium: Fighting Sprawl and Suburban Decline
The Spatial Transformation of First-Tier Suburbs, 1970 to 2000: The Case of Metropolitan Baltimore
Mature Suburbs, Property Values, and Decline in the Midwest? The Case of Cuyahoga County
Innovation at the Edges of the Metropolis: An Analysis of Innovation Drivers in Sydney's Peripheral Suburbs
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Innovation at the Edges of the Metropolis: An Analysis of Innovation Drivers in Sydney's Peripheral Suburbs

 

Volume 19, Issue 3
2008
 
Cristina Martinez-Fernandez and Tavis Potts

This article discusses using the concept of innovation ecosystems to assess innovation intensity in peripheral areas of metropolitan regions. Innovation is a significant driver of prosperity, industrial growth, and job creation. Emergent areas of new technology applications have their roots in entrepreneurial and innovative practices. However, studies have focused on the strengths that cities—and central business districts and inner suburbs in particular—have relative to the industries of the emerging knowledge economy, notably information technology and financial, property, and business services. Most of the time, the peripheral suburbs have been neglected.

The results from a study of innovation drivers in Sydney, Australia, show that peripheral suburbs in metropolitan areas have local innovation processes that require specific planning measures to promote innovation intensity.
Some of these processes are linked to local suburban characteristics that might not apply to the entire city or metropolitan region.
 
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