1 / 27

A New Home in a New City

A New Home in a New City. The Problem. A “twenty-something” couple are moving from Boston to Pittsburgh Where should they live?. About the Couple. They are pretty typical twenty-somethings He will be attending the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Pharmacy She works in fundraising

carney
Download Presentation

A New Home in a New City

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A New Home in a New City

  2. The Problem • A “twenty-something” couple are moving from Boston to Pittsburgh • Where should they live?

  3. About the Couple • They are pretty typical twenty-somethings • He will be attending the University of Pittsburgh’s School of Pharmacy • She works in fundraising • They like being outdoors (biking, hiking, swimming, etc.) • They are excited to own a place and live in a neighborhood

  4. Their neighborhood wish list • Close to Oakland • Single family housing less than $150,000 • Safe • Young (for Pittsburgh) • Urban area - able to walk or bike to shops and restaurants • Near a park Not very specific…

  5. Broke region into census tracts Defined “close to Oakland” as 5 mile radius from Pitt’s School of Pharmacy Criterion 1: Close to Oakland

  6. Criterion 1: Close to Oakland

  7. Criterion 1: Close to Oakland

  8. Criterion 2: Homes <$150,000 • Used median house value data from 2000 Census • Need to factor in appreciation over past seven years • NAR data provides average metro area appreciation from 2000 to 2006: 24.5%

  9. Criterion 2: Homes < $150,000

  10. Criterion 2: Homes < $150,000

  11. Criterion 3: Safety • Desire to live in a “relatively safe” neighborhood • Defined “relatively safe” as the 50% of tracts in target area with the lowest violent crime rates • Information was only available by neighborhoods and municipalities, not census tracts • Violent crime rate was applied to all tracts within a given neighborhood or municipality

  12. Criterion 3: Safety

  13. Criterion 3: Safety

  14. Criterion 4: Younger neighborhood • Approximately 23.9% of all Americans are 22-39 (2005 American Community Survey) • Half of tracts of interest have more than 25.40% of population aged 22-39 • Using Median Age • Skews neighborhoods close to universities • Rachel would like to live in a neighborhood, not a transient college area

  15. Criterion 4: Younger Neighborhood

  16. Criterion 4: Younger Neighborhood

  17. Criterion 5: Mixed-use Area • Walkability • Multiple restaurants, bars, shops • Data very hard to find • Found a site that listed ~1400 bars and restaurants in Allegheny County • Resulted in 648 bars and restaurants for tracts within 5 miles of School of Pharmacy

  18. Criterion 5: Mixed-use Area

  19. Criterion 5: Mixed-use Area

  20. Criterion 6: Parks

  21. Ideal Locations

  22. Best Tracts for Rachel

  23. View from Mt. Washington

More Related