Mosaic 2003 Types
From Wiki
(Difference between revisions)
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{| border="1" | {| border="1" | ||
|+ '''[[Mosaic 2003]] Type Descriptions''' | |+ '''[[Mosaic 2003]] Type Descriptions''' | ||
- | |- | + | |- |
- | ![[Mosaic 2003 Groups]] | + | | |
- | + | !([[Mosaic 2003 Groups]]) | |
|- | |- | ||
!Mosaic!!Description | !Mosaic!!Description |
Revision as of 11:08, 23 August 2011
(Mosaic 2003 Groups) | |
---|---|
Mosaic | Description |
A1 | Financially successful people living in smart flats in cosmopolitan inner city locations |
A2 | Highly educated senior professionals, many working in the media, politics and law |
A3 | Successful managers living in very large houses in outer suburban locations |
A4 | Financially secure couples, many close to retirement, living in sought after suburbs |
A5 | Senior professionals and managers living in the suburbs of major regional centres |
A6 | Successful, high earning couples with new jobs in areas of growing high tech employment |
A7 | Well paid executives living in individually designed homes in rural environments |
B8 | Families and singles living in developments built since 2001 |
B9 | Well qualified couples typically starting a family on a recently built private estate |
B10 | Financially better off families living in relatively spacious modern private estates |
B11 | Dual income families on intermediate incomes living on modern estates |
B12 | Middle income families with children living in estates of modern private homes |
B13 | First generation owner occupiers, many with large amounts of consumer debt |
B14 | Military personnel living in purpose built accommodation |
C15 | Senior white collar workers many on the verge of a financially secure retirement |
C16 | Low density private estates, now with self reliant couples approaching retirement |
C17 | Small business proprietors living in low density estates in smaller communities |
C18 | Inter war suburbs many with less strong cohesion than they originally had |
C19 | Singles and childless couples increasingly taking over attractive older suburbs |
C20 | Suburbs sought after by the more successful members of the Asian community |
D21 | Mixed communities of urban residents living in well built early 20th century housing |
D22 | Comfortably off manual workers living in spacious but inexpensive private houses |
D23 | Owners of affordable terraces built to house 19th century heavy industrial workers |
D24 | Low income families living in cramped Victorian terraced housing in inner city locations |
D25 | Centres of small market towns and resorts containing many hostels and refuges |
D26 | Communities of lowly paid factory workers, many of them of South Asian descent |
D27 | Multi-cultural inner city terraces attracting second generation settlers from diverse communities |
E28 | Neighbourhoods with transient singles living in multiply occupied large old houses |
E29 | Economically successful singles, many living in privately rented inner city flats |
E30 | Young professionals and their families who have gentrified terraces in pre 1914 suburbs |
E31 | Well educated singles and childless couples colonising inner areas of provincial cities |
E32 | Singles and childless couples in small units in newly built private estates |
E33 | Older neighbourhoods increasingly taken over by short term student renters |
E34 | Halls of residence and other buildings occupied mostly by students |
F35 | Young people renting hard to let social housing often in disadvantaged inner city locations |
F36 | High density social housing, mostly in inner London, with high levels of diversity |
F37 | Young families living in upper floors of social housing |
F38 | Singles, childless couples and older people living in high rise social housing |
F39 | Older people living in crowded apartments in high density social housing |
F40 | Older tenements of small private flats often occupied by highly disadvantaged individuals |
G41 | Families, many single parent, in deprived social housing on the edge of regional centres |
G42 | Older people living in very large social housing estates on the outskirts of provincial cities |
G43 | Older people, many in poor health from work in heavy industry, in low rise social housing |
H44 | Manual workers, many close to retirement, in low rise houses in ex-manufacturing towns |
H45 | Older couples, mostly in small towns, who now own houses once rented from the council |
H46 | Residents in 1930s and 1950s council estates, typically in London, now mostly owner occupiers |
H47 | Social housing, typically in 'new towns', with good job opportunities for the poorly qualified |
I48 | Older people living in small council and housing association flats |
I49 | Low income older couples renting low rise social housing in industrial regions |
I50 | Older people receiving care in homes or sheltered accommodation |
J51 | Very elderly people, many financially secure, living in privately owned retirement flats |
J52 | Better off older people, singles and childless couples in developments of private flats |
J53 | Financially secure and physically active older people, many retired to semi rural locations |
J54 | Older couples, independent but on limited incomes, living in bungalows by the sea |
J55 | Older people preferring to live in familiar surroundings in small market towns |
J56 | Neighbourhoods with retired people and transient singles working in the holiday industry |
K57 | Communities of retired people and second homers in areas of high environmental quality |
K58 | Well off commuters and retired people living in attractive country villages |
K59 | Country people living in still agriculturally active villages, mostly in lowland locations |
K60 | Smallholders and self employed farmers, living beyond the reach of urban commuters |
K61 | Low income farmers struggling on thin soils in isolated upland locations |
Z99 | People whose postcode was not recorded in STATS19 returns |