“…Sanoff and Sawhney (1972) in their study of the town of Asheboro, North Carolina identified dwelling and neighbourhood features as the key factors that contribute to residential environment livability satisfaction of the low-income families housing. The previous researchers posit diverse dimensions but common factors to explore the livability of the living environment namely housing/dwelling unit features (Omuta, 1988;Heylen, 2006;Li, 2012;Namazi-Rad et al, 2012;Buys et al;, physical/neighbourhood conditions (Balsas, 2004;Chaudhury, 2005;Heylen, 2006;Leby and Hashim, 2010;Asiyanbola et al, 2012), economic vitality or development (Balsas, 2004;Song, 2011;Saitluanga, 2013), safety (Leby and Hashim, 2010;Asiyanbola et al, 2012;Lawanson et al, 2013) and social interaction (Pandey et al, 2014a;Leby and Hashim, 2010;Saitluanga, 2013). These dimensions of measuring livability were reported to have high internal reliability index (i.e.…”