TRANSFORMATION OF THE RESIDENTIAL SYSTEM OF THE ST. PETERSBURG AGGLOMERATION IN THE 2010-2020

Authors

  • Stanislav S. Lachininskii Saint Petersburg State University
  • Ivan S. Sorokin Institute for Regional Economic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences
  • Nikita V. Maksimovich Saint Petersburg State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17072/2079-7877-2023-3-41-53

Keywords:

residential system, St. Petersburg agglomeration, population dynamics, area of multifamily houses, agglomeration structure

Abstract

The research article aims to study the transformation of the residential system of the St. Petersburg agglomerationin the period from 2010 to 2020 by analyzing statistical data on the population and housing development within the agglomeration.To test the hypothesis that there is a close relationship between the dynamics of population size and housing construction, wecalculated the Pearson correlation coefficient showing correlation between the increase in the total area of apartment buildings andthe population growth for the intercensal period 2010-2020. It amounts to 0.845, which confirms a close relationship between theindicators as well as the research hypothesis. The calculations show that more than 1/2 of the total population growth in theagglomeration is provided by only 7 municipalities, while a group of 6 municipalities accounts for 33% of new housing supply. Themain areas of housing construction by municipalities of the agglomeration have been revealed.

Author Biographies

Stanislav S. Lachininskii, Saint Petersburg State University

Candidate of Geographical Sciences, Head of theDepartment

Ivan S. Sorokin, Institute for Regional Economic Studies of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Junior Researcher

Nikita V. Maksimovich, Saint Petersburg State University

Student

Published

2023-09-30

How to Cite

Lachininskii С. С., Sorokin И. С., & Maksimovich Н. В. (2023). TRANSFORMATION OF THE RESIDENTIAL SYSTEM OF THE ST. PETERSBURG AGGLOMERATION IN THE 2010-2020 . Geographical Bulletin, (3(66), 41–53. https://doi.org/10.17072/2079-7877-2023-3-41-53

Issue

Section

Economic, Social and Political Geography