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A $500 Premium? The Value of Walkability

  • May 29th 2012

by Shilpi Paul

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A $500 Premium? The Value of Walkability: Figure 1
Downtown DC by Shay Thomason

Expanding on the finding that more walkable neighborhoods have higher home prices, a new study released by the Brookings Institution takes a look at exactly how the numbers break down.

Brookings ranked neighborhoods around DC using a scoring system that took into account features like connectivity, density, proximity of uses and traffic measures. It then separated the neighborhoods into five levels of walkability. According to the report, a jump up to the next level of walkability (from Wheaton to Adams Morgan, for example) can yield significant increases in housing prices and rents. It concluded that the most walkable neighborhoods in the area are Georgetown and Courthouse and the least are along sections of New York Avenue and Naylor Road.

From the report:

A one-level (or approximately 20 pt) increase in walkability translates into a $8.88 value premium in office rents, a $6.92 premium in retail rents, an 80 percent increase in retail sales, a $301.76/square foot premium in residential rents, and a $81.54/square foot premium in residential housing values.

A $500 Premium? The Value of Walkability: Figure 2
Courtesy of Brookings.

The report concluded that it’s also valuable to be clustered near other walkable neighborhoods. Compared to standalone walkable areas, the clustered neighborhoods commanded nearly 41 percent more in office rents, 47 percent more in retail rents, and nearly 31 percent more in residential rents. The chart above shows that there is about a $500 difference in the average rents between standalone walkable areas and those that are clustered.

All of this points to a shift in preferences that UrbanTurf has been seeing for some time: suburbs are out, and walkable urban centers are in. Also, prices are high because of a supply/demand problem: more people want to live in walkable neighborhoods than the current housing inventory allows.

People talk about this shift all the time, but the authors of this report are hoping that by attaching real numbers to the economic benefits of living and setting up shop in a walkable neighborhood, policy makers and developers will be able to move quickly to create the kinds of neighborhoods people want to live in.

See other articles related to: brookings institution, walkability, walkable

This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/the_value_of_walkability/5587.

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