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Mackay Nelson article 2019.pdf (439.98 kB)

Agritourism and the adaptive re-use of farm buildings in New Zealand

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posted on 2023-05-03, 21:34 authored by Michael MackayMichael Mackay, Tracy Nelson, Harvey C. Perkins
This paper reports findings from a study of the adaptive re-purposing of farm buildings for a wide array of agritourism activities. The research is being conducted in New Zealand where the international visitor sector is thriving. In response, an increasing number of farmers are attempting to boost their farm incomes by adding tourism ventures to their business portfolios. In doing so, many of them are using and preserving rural cultural heritage, particularly old agricultural and other rural buildings, while also diversifying farm activity. This element of agritourism therefore has an important role in the protection and adaptive re-use of farm buildings, farm landscape change, and the creation of new value and values in the countryside. In the cases we have studied, this entrepreneurial activity is largely farmer-driven and undertaken with some, but limited, financial support from central and local government. In considering the policy implications of our work, we call for the provision of advisory services to facilitate and enable New Zealand farmers to create profitable and sustainable high-quality tourism services that simultaneously preserve farm buildings.

History

Rights statement

Open Access. © 2019 Michael Mackay et al., published by De Gruyter. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

De Gruyter

Journal title

Open Agriculture

ISSN

2391-9531

Citation

Mackay, M., Nelson, T., & Perkins, H. C. (2019). Agritourism and the adaptive re-use of farm buildings in New Zealand. Open Agriculture, 4(1), 465–474. doi:10.1515/opag-2019-0047

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