Geography and Human Relationships

Geography and Human Relationships

Explaining the role of the quality of resilient residential buildings in the development and social growth of urban citizens, case study: Khoy city

Document Type : Original Article

Authors
1 Graduated from Architectural Engineering, Islamic Azad University, Khoy Branch, Khoy, Iran.
2 Master of Architecture and Energy, Tabriz Islamic Art University, Tabriz, Iran
3 Master of Agricultural Engineering, Khoy Azad University, Khoy, Iran.
10.22034/gahr.2026.577947.2686
Abstract
Housing in a contemporary city is not just a physical structure, but also affects social capital, a sense of belonging, security, and citizen participation. In Khoy city, the deterioration and poor safety of some residential areas, in addition to increasing vulnerability to hazards, can weaken social bonds and the capacity for collective action; therefore, it is necessary to explain the role of resilient housing quality in the social growth/development of citizens and select appropriate policy scenarios.

The present study was applied and conducted with a descriptive-analytical approach. Data were collected using a citizen questionnaire (Likert scale) and expert judgment (paired comparisons), and the reliability of the instrument was confirmed at an acceptable level with Cronbach's alpha. AHP and ANP multi-criteria decision-making methods were used in SuperDecisions software to weight the criteria and rank the scenarios.

The results showed that social criteria (social growth/development of citizens and social resilience) have more weight and importance than physical-functional criteria and housing quality. Also, the ranking of scenarios in both AHP and ANP methods was consistent and stable, and the “balanced combination package” scenario (S5) won the first place; followed by “improving housing quality and access to services” (S2) and “physical renovation and security” (S1). The results emphasize that housing policy in Khoy should move away from single-dimensional approaches and move towards balanced and phased packages so that physical safety and resilience, housing quality and access to services, and participatory mechanisms are simultaneously strengthened and physical improvement is transformed into tangible social outcomes (trust, participation, and belonging).
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Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript
Available Online from 23 March 2026

  • Receive Date 24 February 2026
  • Accept Date 23 March 2026