Since 1973, the US Census Bureau has administered the American Housing Survey (AHS) in odd-numbered years. Surveyors ask questions about the quality and value of respondents’ housing, and have a battery of questions for the subset of respondents who moved recently, asking about their search process. The AHS regularly adds new questions and rephrases old […]
LATEST POSTS

An Autopsy of Hsieh & Moretti (2019)?
Update 11/20: Chang-Tai Hsieh counters that Greaney's critique ignores general equilibrium effects which make labor scale invariant. That doesn't address the alleged … [Read More...]

Court: Arlington “Missing Middle” Lawsuit May Proceed to Trial
By Andrew Crouch and Charles GardnerIn March 2023, Arlington County, Virginia passed an amendment to its zoning ordinance which legalized so-called “missing … [Read More...]

Tyler Cowen: “Is Tokyo really a YIMBY success story?”
By Salim Furth
Tyler is stirring the pot over at Marginal Revolution, asking whether Tokyo's low rents are a YIMBY success or just a productivity failure: low productivity and low immigration keep demand down. He calls the latter "NIMBYism". That framing doesn't hold up very … [Read More...]

New Report: Georgia Not Quite an Unregulated Paradise
By Eli Kahn
In a recent report from the Georgia Public Policy Foundation, Chris Denson and J. Thomas Perdue compile the strictest minimum lot size regulations and minimum home size regulations from a range of cities and counties in Georgia. 31 of Georgia’s 159 counties … [Read More...]
traffic and development
One common NIMBY argument is that new development is bad because it brings traffic. As I have pointed out elsewhere, this is silly because it is a "beggar thy neighbor" argument: the traffic doesn't go away if you block the development, it just goes somewhere … [Read More...]

Rubbing Shoulders: Maybe
A study by Maxim Massenkoff and Nathan Wilmers argues that “low-price full-service restaurants,” like Olive Garden or the Cheesecake Factory, are the third places in which rich and poor are most likely to rub shoulders. Using location data, they found … [Read More...]
Is there really a building boom? Not as much as you might think
I've noticed numerous stories and tweets about a building boom: for example, a recent CNBC story asserts that the number of new apartments is "at a 50-year high." Various twitterati have used this claim to support their own points of view: some claim that … [Read More...]

Pedestrianized streets usually fail – and that’s OK
By Salim Furth
Urbanists love to celebrate, and replicate great urban spaces - and sometimes can't understand why governments don't:https://twitter.com/PEWilliams_/status/1697265425241752004But what's important to recall - especially for those of us under, uh, 41 - … [Read More...]

Solano County Dreamin’: Is there a market urbanist way to build a new city?
By Salim Furth
Conor Dougherty and Erin Griffith revealed the identities behind a Silicon Valley investor group, Flannery Associates, that had gradually purchased 55,000 acres of ranchland near Travis Air Force Base in Solano County, California. Scale check: that's a lot of … [Read More...]
Are Republicans or Democrats more pro-housing? Yes.
Some weeks ago, I was participating in a Zoom discussion on NIMBYism, and someone asked: are Republicans and conservatives more pro-housing than Democrats and liberals, or less so?After examining some poll data, I discovered that the answer depends on how … [Read More...]
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Top Posts
- Only 2 Ways to Fight Gentrification (you're not going to like one of them)
- Why Is Japanese Zoning More Liberal Than US Zoning?
- What Should I Read to Understand Zoning?
- The Limits of the Singapore Housing Model
- Book Review: The Making of Urban Japan
- Houston's Beautiful (Yet Partial) Embrace of Market Urbanism
- When It Comes to Walkability, Mexico City Is Miles Ahead
- Ranking State Land Use Regulations
- Subsidizing Suburbia: A forgotten history of how the government created suburbia
- An Autopsy of Hsieh & Moretti (2019)?