Does Walkability Influence Housing Prices?
type="main"> <title type="main">Objective</title> <p>We examine the effects of neighborhood walkability on house values. Recent research claims that walkability makes homes more valuable, ceteris paribus. We contend that some studies report a spurious effect of walkability because of differences between areas with high and low walkability. </section> <title type="main">Methods</title> <p>We replicate the positive effect of walkability on prices for single-family homes and condominiums in Miami, Florida, using a unique data set of house values and characteristics. We employ a fixed effects regression model instead of a traditional ordinary least squares regression model to account for the unobserved heterogeneity of neighborhoods. </section> <title type="main">Results</title> <p>We find that walkability's impact on housing value becomes statistically insignificant at the margin after controlling for heteroscedasticity and neighborhood fixed effects. </section> <title type="main">Conclusions</title> <p>The significant impact of the fixed effects suggests that something other than walkability is affecting prices and that better specified models are needed to discern the real price effects of walkability. </section>
| Year of publication: |
2014
|
|---|---|
| Authors: | Boyle, Austin ; Barrilleaux, Charles ; Scheller, Daniel |
| Published in: |
Social Science Quarterly. - Southwestern Social Science Association, ISSN 0038-4941. - Vol. 95.2014, 3, p. 852-867
|
| Publisher: |
Southwestern Social Science Association |
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