In North America, competition for land in urban localities has often been considered as driven by growth machines (Logan and Molotch, 1987;Molotch, 1976;. According to this concept, those who stand to gain directly as landowners, speculators, or investors form local growth coalitions with service providers (such as realtors, bankers, and local media) to promote overall growth (Canan and Hennessy, 1989). These local growth elites play a major role in supporting local politicians, who also view growth as a key function of local government. As Logan and Molotch (1987) point out, the political autonomy of place and the land-use planning power this entails provides a key institutional underpinning which supports the growth machine. However, this power results in the uneven distribution of growth benefits within the community (Green, 1995).In response to global economic and political restructuring, local economic development has now become the arena for many development decisions at the local level. This has led to increased place competition between localities and the emergence of various forms of coalition (Cox and Mair, 1988;Keating, 1993), including public^privatesector partnerships (Jacobs, 1995;Pierre, 1995), to enhance growth opportunities. At the same time, public participation in planning has become accepted practice, offering a formal arena for public input into development processes. Under these changed circumstances growth machines are undergoing transformation (Molotch, 1993), as economic imperatives in land-use decisionmaking are moderated by social and environmental considerations. In recent years, the inequitable benefits of unbridled urban growth have been challenged in some places with the introduction of growth-management practices which offer a`guidance system' to implement a desirable community vision by attempting to capture the benefits of growth while mitigating the consequences (Chapin and Kaiser, 1979). Here, local residents gain influence as a new governance structure is established and services and infrastructure required by local residents emerge.This purpose of this paper is to illustrate how the concepts of the growth machine and growth management apply (and are extended by this application) to resort settings