《Is there room for children in booming western cities? Empirical evidence from Austin, Denver, and Portland》

打印
作者
Jake Wegmann
来源
CITIES,Vol.96,Issue1,Article 102403
语言
英文
关键字
Children;Missing middle housing;Affordable housing;Gentrification;American west
作者单位
Community and Regional Planning Program, School of Architecture University of Texas at Austin, United States of America;Community and Regional Planning Program, School of Architecture University of Texas at Austin, United States of America
摘要
Austin, Denver, and Portland are all booming cities in or on the edge of the American West. Their thriving economies and natural and urban amenities have attracted large numbers of in-migrants. As housing prices rise, families with children in particular face diminished choices about where to live. This article asks three questions: How have the child populations of Austin, Denver, and Portland fared in recent decades? Is there a link between gentrification and a decrease in family households with children? And finally, to what extent do various housing types associate with more or fewer of these households? In brief, Austin, Denver, and Portland have fared reasonably well in maintaining family life, but neighborhoods with master-planned brownfield or greenfield developments appear to have accounted for a disproportionate share of the growth in their child populations, helping to offset sharp losses in gentrifying neighborhoods closer to the cities' urban cores. As these opportunities begin to diminish in all three cities, the strong association between compact single-family and “missing middle,” or middle density, housing types and households with children suggests pathways for these three cities and others like them to retain such households, by using policy to encourage these development types.