Purpose – This paper aims to classify major elements in a typology of gated communities and develop a
framework that can be used to promote international comparison of this built form. Design/methodology/approach – The paper draws on a survey of 77 gated housing estates in Hong
Kong and interviews with major stakeholders to develop and order a classification of elements of a typology of gated communities. Principle component analysis and regression analysis are used in conjunction with insights from 20 in-depth and about 70 open-ended face-to-face interviews.
Findings – This paper explores Hong Kong’s gated communities to evaluate the relationships between the
four main elements of a typology of gated communities: supply, demand, features of gated estates and
characteristics of built form. It is suggested that there is a hierarchical relationship between the elements,
supply and demand are higher-order elements and features of gated housing and characteristics of the
housing stock are lower-order elements. The paper additionally highlights the impact of definitional and
conceptual drift in key concepts, such as security, privacy, prestige and lifestyle, on developing robust
typologies.
Originality/value – The paper reviews the many and varied typologies of gated communities in the
international literature, classifies the elements into four main groups and posits a hierarchical relationship
between these elements. This paper proposes a robust methodology for further comparative research into
gated communities.