Green spaces in housing developments are areas designated for parks and natural landscapes to enhance residents' quality of life and environmental health. Proponents argue that it enhances community well-being and environmental quality. Opponents argue that it increases the cost of housing and developers should decide the layout of their projects.
Statistics are shown for this demographic
Ideology
Local Government Area
Response rates from 2.3k Australia voters.
91% Yes |
9% No |
91% Yes |
9% No |
Trend of support over time for each answer from 2.3k Australia voters.
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Trend of how important this issue is for 2.3k Australia voters.
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Unique answers from Australia voters whose views went beyond the provided options.
@B3CKLNK2wks2W
Yes, but only if there is no green spaces nearby, their doesn't need to be a park and/or oval in every housing estate
@B32D8FK3wks3W
They should also provide enough space for passive solar design, to make it possible to build sustainable houses.
@9SYC4SQ6mos6MO
PUBLIC (government-funded and community-built) HOUSING ONLY. ABOLISH PRIVATE PROPERTY (private development for houses is now just another investment, housing is no longer treated as a vital human right).
@9SWQZYB6mos6MO
No, incentivise high density living and protect existing nature instead
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