From time to time, we hear of the demolition of an historic or architecturally significant home in the news. Inevitably, there’s an outcry. Community leaders agree: “Something must be done!”
But what can be done? read more »
HousingFive Steps to Save Historically and Architecturally Significant Homes — Proactively
by Douglas Newby 02/27/2022
From time to time, we hear of the demolition of an historic or architecturally significant home in the news. Inevitably, there’s an outcry. Community leaders agree: “Something must be done!” But what can be done? read more » »
Subjects:
Does California Know What Time it Is?
by Jerry Sullivan 02/25/2022
Has the California proposition changed fundamentally? And does it matter for real estate? The answer to the first question is yes—the state had a net population decline in 2021, the first drop since it began annual counts more than a century ago. read more » »
You Can't Fix the Housing Crisis with New Houses. We Need New Cities
by Joel Kotkin 02/24/2022
Housing is rapidly becoming the key economic issue facing America's beleaguered middle class. Even as interest rates rise, rents are on a wild binge, up near 20 percent in the past year or more in some cities. Meanwhile, home prices have hit a high and appear to be climbing further still. Higher prices are emerging even in what have long been relative bargain communities in the southeast, as refugees from the high-priced Northeast pour in with their greater resources. read more » »
Subjects:
Exurbia Rising
by Joel Kotkin 02/22/2022
Perhaps nowhere is the gap between America’s cognitive elite and its populace larger than in their preferred urban forms. For nearly a century—interrupted only by the Depression and the Second World War—Americans have been heading further from the urban core, seeking affordable and safe communities with good schools, parks, and a generally more tranquil lifestyle. read more » »
Subjects:
Domestic Migration 2010-2020: Flocking to Affordability
by Wendell Cox 02/21/2022
Some metropolitan areas continue to have higher costs of living relative to the national average. The most important component is the extent to which higher housing costs contribute to these differences. Our Urban Reform Institute Standard of Living Index showed that more than 85% of the difference between costs in the more expensive metropolitan areas and the nation was attributable to housing (Figure 1). read more » »
Subjects:
Are We Really Among the Wealthiest People on the Planet?
by Don Brash 02/13/2022
There are lots of ways of measuring how New Zealand is doing, and none of them is perfect. We stack up very well on measures like life expectancy, unemployment, infant mortality, and car ownership. read more » »
Subjects:
What Can Jersey City Teach Us About YIMBYism?
by Pete Saunders 02/07/2022
I’m back. I haven’t written much lately but I am always reading and gathering topics for future posts. Here’s one. Over the last 2-3 months, I’ve come across Twitter discussions among many self-professed YIMBY (Yes In My Back Yard) advocates. If you’re familiar with YIMBYs you know that they believe the lack of housing affordability in American cities largely stems from regulatory restraints that limits housing production. read more »
Subjects:
Metro Costs of Living and Domestic Migration: 2010-2020
by Wendell Cox 02/01/2022
As the recently ended decade evolved, migration from more costly US metropolitan areas to those with lower costs increased. This developing dispersion is indicated in net domestic migration among the nation’s 384 metropolitan areas from 2010 to 2020. This article categorizes the 384 metropolitan areas by Bureau of Economic Analysis 2020 Regional Price Parities (cost of living), and their net domestic migration. read more » »
Subjects:
How Cato Sold Out California Property Owners
by Randal OToole 01/28/2022
In September, 2021, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed a bill abolishing single-family zoning. This bill was a victory for the Yes in Other People’s Back Yards (YIOPBY) movement, as well as for urban planners who sought to densify California urban areas, which are already the densest in the nation. read more » »
A Long Term Outlook on Housing Affordability
by Ross Elliott 01/24/2022
So, there’s yet another inquiry into housing affordability underway. This latest is called “The House of Representatives Standing Committee on Tax and Revenue inquiry into housing affordability and supply in Australia.” Chaired by NSW Liberal MP Mr Jason Falinski, it’s getting a few headlines with statements like ‘half the cost of new house and land packages consist of state and local government charges.’ read more » »
|
Subscribe to NG ArticlesThe Coming of Neo-Feudalism
Infinite Suburbia
Recent blog posts
BooksAuthored by Aaron Renn, The Urban State of Mind: Meditations on the City is the first Urbanophile e-book, featuring provocative essays on the key issues facing our cities, including innovation, talent attraction and brain drain, global soft power, sustainability, economic development, and localism. Recent popular content
Recommended Books
Blogroll and Partner Sites
User login |