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Reply to "Arlington Missing Middle Housing Q&A"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Haven’t read all the pages on this, but just scanned a Boston fed report on increased density - even they say increased density makes neighborhoods less valuable/perceived quality declines for homeowners. https://www.bostonfed.org/news-and-events/news/2022/10/boston-fed-research-relaxing-density-restrictions-best-way-to-increase-multifamily-housing.aspx “House prices would likely fall with rents if greater housing density is allowed The authors find that zoning reform that relaxes density restrictions doesn’t just reduce rents. It also causes house prices to fall—including single-family house prices. Their analysis shows that allowing one more housing unit per acre in a Greater Boston neighborhood increases the number of units in that neighborhood by an average of 0.4. This increase results in the neighborhood’s rents dropping more than 5% and house prices falling more than 7% on average (see graphic). [b]House prices drop because the housing supply increases. Or they fall because when a neighborhood becomes denser, its perceived quality declines[/b].“ Obviously, Boston is bigger than Arlington so our supply may not make a difference to prices but the perceived quality sure will decline! [/quote] that's great news! that way more people of all backgrounds can afford to live in Arlington. what's the problem with that? [/quote]
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