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Urban Land Values and Urban Form: Productivity and Value

Explore the relationship between land productivity, transportation costs, and the value of urban land. Learn about different urban forms and their impact on land values. Discover the factors influencing spatial patterns and the residual theory of land value. Understand how transportation costs affect land value and the problems associated with urban sprawl. Explore the concept of "smart growth" and market solutions to traffic congestion and pollution.

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Urban Land Values and Urban Form: Productivity and Value

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  1. Lecture 3 Urban Land Values and Urban Form

  2. Productivity and Value The more productive land is, the more price and rent it will generate Transportation costs are a major factor affecting productivity and, therefore, value of land • Gas • Public Transportation • Insurance • Capital Costs (purchase costs and real depreciation) • Time

  3. Urban Form Physical spatial characteristics of a city • How big is the city spatially? • What is the overall density and geographical dimensions? • How does this density vary across different parts of the city? • What are the patterns of the locations of different land uses? • Where do high-income and low-income neighborhoods tend to locate?

  4. Variations of Urban Form Steep urban form with central focus of intense land use and value Sprawled urban form with multiple focus points and even more land values Value

  5. Factors Influencing Spatial Patterns • The higher transportation costs are for a market as a whole, the steeper will be the land value gradient over space away from centers of economic activity. • The more populous a given region and the more concentrated the supply of land from natural or political regulation, the higher the value of useable land. • The more productive any given user of space, the more rent the user can pay.

  6. Factors Influencing Spatial Patterns • In competitive markets, more efficient and productive users of space will need to pay excess profits in order to outbid other users. • Land captures all of the residual productivity through rents or prices.

  7. Factors of Production • Land • Labor • Capital • Raw Materials

  8. Residual Theory of Land Value • Land is only Factor of Production that is fixed in location—it cannot be moved • Value of labor, capital, and raw materials are derived first, as these factors are mobile (could be worth more elsewhere) • Rent is paid from remaining revenue after mobile factors are paid respective market costs

  9. Residual Theory of Land Value

  10. Transportation Costs and Land Value Major differences in land value from one location to another are differences in transportation costs • Energy Costs • Maintenance and Capital Costs • Time Costs

  11. Monocentric Cities Land Value is Highest CBD

  12. Multicentric Cities Land Value is Highest NBD CBD NBD

  13. Lecture 3 Urban Sprawl

  14. Problems with Land Sprawl • Traffic congestion and longer commute time • Auto pollution • Lost green space and farmland • Deterioration of the central city • Concentration of poverty and unemployment • Low-quality city schools • Loss of community • General economic inefficiency • Disregard for nature

  15. Growth of Suburbs • Increase in number of cars • Interstate system has decreased travel time • Zoning Changes

  16. Government Problems with Suburban Growth • Governmental and public services of the central city are usually not decreased in line with fewer residents. • Middle- and upper-income populations have largely left the central urban core, placing most purchasing power in the suburbs • Traffic congestion from highways connecting CBD to suburbs, increasing transportation costs

  17. Lecture 3 “Smart Growth”

  18. Smart Growth • Planning concept that calls for more compact and transit-oriented development • Developed in 1990’s and early 2000’s • Aims at curbing sprawl, which is “spreading out the population away from an older central city core along with reduction in density of households”

  19. Market Solutions to Traffic Congestion and Pollution • Increases in permitted building heights and density within all neighborhoods • Municipalities to encourage walkable communities with flexible mixed-use zoning clusters • Reduction in air pollution

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