Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is not true. These neighborhoods already have a lower price/ square foot built in because they're not walkable. Distance from urban amenities lowers property values.
So do shitty public schools and proximity to shelters, halfway houses and public housing projects.
Anonymous wrote:kind of weird. my house at the beach has a low walkscore and does not into take into account that the beach is 400 feet away ...
Anonymous wrote:
These are coming to your neighborhood very soon. See "the suburbanization of poverty".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is not true. These neighborhoods already have a lower price/ square foot built in because they're not walkable. Distance from urban amenities lowers property values.
So do shitty public schools and proximity to shelters, halfway houses and public housing projects.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This is not true. These neighborhoods already have a lower price/ square foot built in because they're not walkable. Distance from urban amenities lowers property values.
So do shitty public schools and proximity to shelters, halfway houses and public housing projects.
Anonymous wrote:I live in the suburbs, so I know the walk score will be lower, and I'm fine with that because I dislike city living -- noise, light pollution, lack of grass, trees, etc.
When I was buying a house recently I looked at walk scores, but also judged for myself whether I could walk to things that mattered to me. For example, I considered two houses, one with a higher walk score b/c it was closer to stores, but we couldn't walk to the elementary or middle schools, or to a local pool. The other house I looked at and bought isn't near shopping, but is terrifically walkable for elementary and middle school and for a local pool. Walking to elementary school is hugely important for me and my son right now, so that was a big factor for me.
Anonymous wrote:
This is not true. These neighborhoods already have a lower price/ square foot built in because they're not walkable. Distance from urban amenities lowers property values.
Anonymous wrote:Walk Score is very important for certain neighborhoods where walkability is the big selling point. It has little or no importance in areas where home and lot size are more highly valued. It's like asking if the 0-to-60 time is important when buying a car -- yes if you are buying a sports car but no if you are buying a minivan -- completely different products.