Abstract

With changes in growing techniques and trade regulations, the Niagara Region has become home to an emerging New World Wine Route, making it one of Canada's premier wine tourism destinations. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the competitive advantages of embedded clusters at three different scales along the Niagara Wine Route. Building on earlier concepts of growth poles and agglomeration economies, cluster theory focuses on competitive advantage and indicates new roles for companies, governments and other institutions to enhance competitiveness. At the smallest scale, a Wine Tourism Village is explored through Cave Spring Cellars, which dominates the Village of Jordan along with its premier restaurant and country inn. A small shopping district has opened on the main street next to the winery complex. Increasing in scale is the cluster of eleven wineries surrounding the heritage-shopping town of Niagara-on-the-Lake. Complementary to the wineries are close to 60 tourist shops, numerous accommodation establishments, a historic fort and a festival theatre. Finally at the Regional level, is the entire Niagara Wine Route with over 50 wineries, which are connected to the major tourist attractions of Niagara Falls. Key informant interviews were conducted with wineries at the Village, Town and Regional level. Nearest-neighbour analysis is performed on the entire Wine Route along with land use mapping in the three locations. A schematic diagram based on the embedded clusters is presented illustrating the importance of horizontal and vertical linkages in generating a competitive advantage through location in the context of cluster theory.

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