Neighborhood Change, One Pint at a Time: The Impact of Local Characteristics on Craft Breweries
Jesus M. Barajas, Geoff Boeing, Julie Wartell

TL;DR
This study investigates how the growth and location of craft breweries relate to neighborhood changes in the US, revealing a link with urban creatives but not necessarily with gentrification.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of the spatial and demographic impacts of craft breweries on neighborhoods using geocoded data and statistical models.
Findings
Presence of a prior brewery predicts new openings after 2013
No strong evidence linking breweries directly to gentrification
Increased influx of lower-to-middle income creatives associated with brewery locations
Abstract
Cities have recognized the local impact of small craft breweries, in many ways altering municipal codes to make it easier to establish breweries and making them the anchor points of economic development and revitalization. Nevertheless, we do not know the extent to which these strategies impacted changes at the neighborhood level across the nation. In this chapter, we examine the relationship between growth and locations of craft breweries and the incidence of neighborhood change across the United States. In the first part of the chapter, we rely on a unique dataset of geocoded brewery locations that tracks openings and closings from 2004 to the present. Using measures of neighborhood change often found in literature on gentrification-related topics, we develop statistical models relying on census tract demographic and employment data to determine the extent to which brewery locations…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWine Industry and Tourism · Horticultural and Viticultural Research
