Driving Factors Behind the Social Role of Retail Centers on Recreational Activities
Sepideh Baghaee, Saeed Nosratabadi, Farshid Aram, and Amir Mosavi

TL;DR
This study investigates how travel time and shop variety influence customer engagement in recreational activities at retail centers, highlighting that longer travel times and diverse shops increase leisure use.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence from case studies in Tehran and Madrid on factors affecting social and recreational use of retail centers.
Findings
Longer travel times correlate with increased leisure activities.
Greater shop variety encourages customers to spend more leisure time.
Customer motivation is linked to travel time and shop diversity.
Abstract
Retail centers can be considered as places for interactional and recreational activities and such social roles of retail centers contribute to the popularity of the retail centers. Therefore, the main objective of this study was to identify effective factors encouraging customers to engage with interactional activities and measure how these factors affect customer behavior. Accordingly, two hypotheses were raised illustrating that the travel time (i.e., the time it takes for a customer to reach the retail center) and the variety of shops (in a retail center) increase the percentage of people who spend their leisure time and recreational activities retail centers. Two case studies were conducted in two analogous retail centers, one in Tehran, Iran, and the other in Madrid, Spain. According to the results, there is an interaction between the travel time and the motivation for the presence…
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Taxonomy
MethodsEmirates Airlines Office in Dubai
