2021
DOI: 10.1080/15623599.2021.1943628
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Alterations’ impacts on sustainability of low-cost housing schemes in Sri Lanka: the occupants’ perspective

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…The rank-ordering of the ten type constructs on residents' preferences in private housing developers revealed that privacy, floor quality, window and wall conditions, and waste management were the highest-ranked, while sewage disposal, ventilation, and drainage system, and waste management were the lowest-ranked. This find-ing is consistent with the findings of [7]. Alterations' impacts on the sustainability of low-cost housing schemes in Sri Lanka, which revealed that occupants of low-cost housing schemes prefer houses with good floor qualities, a good drainage system, proper waste management, parking space and privacy.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The rank-ordering of the ten type constructs on residents' preferences in private housing developers revealed that privacy, floor quality, window and wall conditions, and waste management were the highest-ranked, while sewage disposal, ventilation, and drainage system, and waste management were the lowest-ranked. This find-ing is consistent with the findings of [7]. Alterations' impacts on the sustainability of low-cost housing schemes in Sri Lanka, which revealed that occupants of low-cost housing schemes prefer houses with good floor qualities, a good drainage system, proper waste management, parking space and privacy.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Interpretivists believe that methods should be determined according to the research study and not pre-determined (Asghar, 2013). However, to a smaller extent, housing studies rooted in qualitative research exist (such as Ambrose et al, 2017;Hulse and Saugeres, 2007;De Zoysa et al, 2021;Ebekozien, 2021;Cretan et al, 2020). Although there are several distinct differences between positivist and interpretivist research paradigms that include their approach, inquiry, and reasoning, some similarities exist between the two dominant paradigms.…”
Section: Research Paradigmmentioning
confidence: 99%