Summary

About our research

Manchester Met has a long tradition of place-related research, focusing on marketing and branding, management processes and the developing role of the UK high street.

Since the 1980s our researchers have produced over 300 academic articles, making us one of the leading place-making research groups.

Researchers in our Transforming Places knowledge platform mainly work on projects within the Institute of Place Management (IPM), the professional body formed by Manchester Met and the Association of Town Centre Management.

They complete research contracts for private, public and third sector clients, drawing together multi-disciplinary expertise and collaborating with external partners to understand what makes better places.

Thanks to their breadth of expertise and close links with practitioners, they can tackle persistent economic and social problems, not least helping high street retailers adapt to the boom in online sales.

Our research has influenced national policy on retail competition, planning, town and city centres, and more.

IPM researchers ran the High Street Britain 2015 inquiry on behalf of the UK’s All Party Parliamentary Small Shops Group. And in 2019 the IPM was awarded £8.6 million to lead the government’s High Streets Task Force.

Meet the team

See contact details, publications history, specialisms and more.

Our research themes

Our research feeds into the four clusters under which the IPM groups its approaches and outputs:

  • places — studying the range, scale and type of locations to discover similarities, differences and factors which determine their vitality and viability

  • co-creating places — examining the role different groups play in shaping an area and how those involved can influence the presentation of a place

  • experiencing places — investigating how visitors move through an area and experience it with all their senses, and how these experiences can be managed

  • time and place — looking at the impact of history and heritage, including often overlooked places, and the rhythms of people and prospects that inevitably occur

Selected projects

Publications

Partners