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Shaping Cities: How micro-organisations contribute to the ongoing development of creative districts across space

Shaping Cities: How micro-organisations contribute to the ongoing development of creative districts across space
Shaping Cities: How micro-organisations contribute to the ongoing development of creative districts across space
The overarching aim of this thesis is to understand how micro-organisations (less than 10 staff, Department of Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy 2023), contribute to the ongoing development of bottom-up creative districts across space, using the lens of trans local scenes. Creative districts are spatial agglomerations of similar organisations which offer production and consumption opportunities related to the creative industries (i.e. record stores, music venues, art galleries, maker studios) (Santagata 2002; Mizzau and Montanari 2018). Current literature on the development of these districts focuses on the factors which lead to the initial development of these areas. There is a gap, however, for understanding how over time, creative districts across much of the western world have converged into the uniform model that we associate with them today; populated by micro-organisations with industrial ‘DIY’ aesthetics and practices which focus on supporting independent, emerging and local
activity. This research aim has been investigated with a qualitative methodology of 44 in-depth, semi- structured interviews with individuals running micro-organisations. These interviews were supplemented with participant observation undertaken in 27 micro-organisations, and qualitative content analysis of a select sample of the Instagram posts from 17 micro-organisations. Research was undertaken in four case study creative districts: the Baltic Triangle in Liverpool; the Northern Quarter in Manchester; Digbeth in Birmingham; and Shoreditch in London. The three empirical chapters of this thesis address three research questions. The first empirical chapter answers the question “what roles
do micro-organisations enact in creative district scenes?”. This chapter develops and unpacks a typology of the cultural, financial and social support roles through which micro-organisations integrate themselves into their respective scenes. The second empirical chapter addresses the research question: “how do micro-organisations interact with each other across space?”. This chapter provides
empirical examples of the physical and virtual mechanisms used by micro-organisations to enable trans-local flows; as well as the implications these have for the continued development of creative districts. The third empirical chapter examines the question “how can micro-organisations in creative districts be supported through the challenges they currently face?”. Informed by findings on the
impacts of the pandemic, gaps in government support and the use of informal support mechanisms, this chapter outlines three policy recommendations surrounding tax reform, local government relationships and improving grant guidance. These empirical findings contribute to the literature on scenes, trans-local scenes, economic geography, creative district development, micro-businesses and
the creative industries.
University of Southampton
Campbell-Nieves, Charlotte Amelia
261e97c9-28f6-409a-b582-5e110a03508d
Campbell-Nieves, Charlotte Amelia
261e97c9-28f6-409a-b582-5e110a03508d
Hracs, Brian
ab1df99d-bb99-4770-9ea1-b9d654a284dc
Sunley, Peter
a3efb579-965f-4f39-812e-9e07caf15afd

Campbell-Nieves, Charlotte Amelia (2026) Shaping Cities: How micro-organisations contribute to the ongoing development of creative districts across space. University of Southampton, Doctoral Thesis, 286pp.

Record type: Thesis (Doctoral)

Abstract

The overarching aim of this thesis is to understand how micro-organisations (less than 10 staff, Department of Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy 2023), contribute to the ongoing development of bottom-up creative districts across space, using the lens of trans local scenes. Creative districts are spatial agglomerations of similar organisations which offer production and consumption opportunities related to the creative industries (i.e. record stores, music venues, art galleries, maker studios) (Santagata 2002; Mizzau and Montanari 2018). Current literature on the development of these districts focuses on the factors which lead to the initial development of these areas. There is a gap, however, for understanding how over time, creative districts across much of the western world have converged into the uniform model that we associate with them today; populated by micro-organisations with industrial ‘DIY’ aesthetics and practices which focus on supporting independent, emerging and local
activity. This research aim has been investigated with a qualitative methodology of 44 in-depth, semi- structured interviews with individuals running micro-organisations. These interviews were supplemented with participant observation undertaken in 27 micro-organisations, and qualitative content analysis of a select sample of the Instagram posts from 17 micro-organisations. Research was undertaken in four case study creative districts: the Baltic Triangle in Liverpool; the Northern Quarter in Manchester; Digbeth in Birmingham; and Shoreditch in London. The three empirical chapters of this thesis address three research questions. The first empirical chapter answers the question “what roles
do micro-organisations enact in creative district scenes?”. This chapter develops and unpacks a typology of the cultural, financial and social support roles through which micro-organisations integrate themselves into their respective scenes. The second empirical chapter addresses the research question: “how do micro-organisations interact with each other across space?”. This chapter provides
empirical examples of the physical and virtual mechanisms used by micro-organisations to enable trans-local flows; as well as the implications these have for the continued development of creative districts. The third empirical chapter examines the question “how can micro-organisations in creative districts be supported through the challenges they currently face?”. Informed by findings on the
impacts of the pandemic, gaps in government support and the use of informal support mechanisms, this chapter outlines three policy recommendations surrounding tax reform, local government relationships and improving grant guidance. These empirical findings contribute to the literature on scenes, trans-local scenes, economic geography, creative district development, micro-businesses and
the creative industries.

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Published date: January 2026

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 508547
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/508547
PURE UUID: c6929f30-a649-4cec-97c3-af2851163392
ORCID for Brian Hracs: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1001-6877
ORCID for Peter Sunley: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4803-5299

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Date deposited: 26 Jan 2026 17:58
Last modified: 27 Jan 2026 03:07

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