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Articles

The Impacts of Big Box Retail on Downtown: A Case Study of Target in Davis (CA)

Pages 45-60 | Published online: 17 Jan 2018
 

Abstract

Problem, research strategy, and findings: Big box stores have proliferated across the United States in the last three decades. Proponents have praised them for providing affordability and convenience to consumers, but opponents have criticized them for driving out local businesses, among other negative impacts for communities. We examine the impact of a big box store on a traditional downtown for the case of Davis (CA), which amended its zoning code to allow a Target store that opened at the periphery of the city in 2009. We use a before-and-after survey to determine where residents shopped for selected items before the store opened and after, evaluating which businesses were most affected. The results show that the new big box store had a limited impact on downtown businesses but substantial impact on stores located elsewhere within Davis and especially beyond city limits.

Takeaway for practice: The Davis case suggests that the impacts of big box stores are not always what opponents anticipate. Other cities may lack some of the natural advantages that helped downtown Davis survive the opening of a big box store, but our results suggest that deliberate efforts to protect and enliven the downtown area mattered, too. Planners who want to fortify their own downtowns from the potential harms of big box stores could focus on enhancing downtown vitality by supporting a wide variety of activities and promoting the experiential aspects of shopping downtown. Such strategies would also put downtowns in a better position for surviving the rapidly evolving terrain of retail industry in the 21st century.

Supplemental Material

Supplemental data for this article can be found on the publisher’s website.

Note

1. Our own calculations from “Estimated Annual Sales of U.S. Retail and Food Services Firms by Kind of Business: 1992 Through 2015,” Annual Retail Trade Survey (U.S. Census Bureau, 2015).

Notes

1 Authors’ calculations. “Estimated Annual Sales of U.S. Retail and Food Services Firms by Kind of Business: 1992 Through 2015.” Annual Retail Trade Survey (U.S. Census Bureau, Citation2015).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Gian-Claudia Sciara

Gian-Claudia Sciara, AICP ([email protected]), is an assistant professor of community and regional planning at the University of Texas, Austin.

Kristin Lovejoy

Kristin Lovejoy ([email protected]) is an independent scholar and graduate of the University of California, Davis.

Susan Handy

Susan Handy ([email protected]) is professor of environmental science and policy and director of the National Center for Sustainable Transportation at the University of California, Davis.

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