Temporary Urbanism in Action: Theme-Neighborhood (Mis)alignment of Beijing Pop-up Markets
Temporary Urbanism in Action: Theme-Neighborhood (Mis)alignment of Beijing Pop-up Markets
Luo Qingyun, Wenjun Xu, Mengling Jiang, Anqi Xia (Advisor: Lai Yuan)
Current Status: Conference Paper, Accepted and Presented
Supporting Documents: Draft manuscripts
Pop-up markets are increasingly deployed as temporary urban-regeneration tools, yet their capacity to deliver community benefits beyond mere commerce remains uncertain. This study mapped 447 Beijing pop-ups (Dec 2023–Nov 2024) and analysed 25 cases for market-neighbourhood fit. Fifteen-minute walking isochrones intersected Gaode POIs, land-use entropy and VIIRS night-lights; while Xiaohongshu posts provided popularity and satisfaction metrics. Theme vectors for both markets and neighbourhoods were derived via Word2Vec; their cosine similarity measured thematic alignment. Results show that while 80% markets align closely with local amenities, those with greater thematic divergence often achieve higher visitor satisfaction (p<0.05). Community-driven, experimentally themed pop-ups can thus act as low-risk prototypes for augmenting neighbourhood services and deepening civic engagement.
Highlights:
Developed methods using NLP tools, including word2vec, to bridge physical and virtual usages of temporary events, considering their nature of interest-oriented and reliance on media advertisements.
Elucidated how disparities between market themes and neighbourhood functional areas can bolster market satisfaction.
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