TY - JOUR
T1 - Race and income moderate the effect of parks on housing prices in a segregated city
AU - Castillo-Castillo, Adriana
AU - Walker, Rebecca
AU - Keeler, Bonnie
AU - Lonsdorf, Eric
AU - Ramer, Hannah
N1 - This work was made possible [in part] by the Minneapolis-St. Paul Metropolitan Area (MSP) Urban Long Term Ecological Research Program, through its grant from the National Science Foundation (DEB-2045382). Major thanks to Zillow who provided the data for the analysis. In addition, a special thanks to \u201CPLACES lab\u201D who provided us with a cleaned version of the properties\u2019 geolocations. The authors would like also to acknowledge the Minnesota Supercomputing Institute (MSI) at the University of Minnesota for providing the necessary software resources that contributed to made possible the results and analysis of this research paper. URL: http://www.msi.umn.edu.
PY - 2025/7
Y1 - 2025/7
N2 - Parks provide environmental and recreational services to urban areas, and are valuable for human health and social cohesion. Current literature demonstrates the positive influence of urban parks on property values. This work, which typically examines the relationship between proximity or quality of parks and surrounding property values, assumes the value of park attributes is not influenced by neighborhood context. However, there is a gap in understanding how the value of park attributes varies across neighborhoods with different socio-economic and racial demographics, particularly in highly segregated cities. Using spatial data on park attributes, home values, and neighborhood demographics in the Twin-Cities area in the United States, we investigated how willingness to pay for park characteristics vary by neighborhood income and race characteristics. Some park attributes such as tree canopy and the presence of a dog park had positive and significant impacts on property values across neighborhoods of varying race and income characteristics, whereas park size, bike trail access, and presence of water bodies in parks had positive or negative effects on property values depending on race and income of the surrounding neighborhoods. Our analysis helps to understand how park investments in neighborhoods of varying race and income may differentially affect housing market dynamics with theoretical and practical implications for addressing green gentrification.
AB - Parks provide environmental and recreational services to urban areas, and are valuable for human health and social cohesion. Current literature demonstrates the positive influence of urban parks on property values. This work, which typically examines the relationship between proximity or quality of parks and surrounding property values, assumes the value of park attributes is not influenced by neighborhood context. However, there is a gap in understanding how the value of park attributes varies across neighborhoods with different socio-economic and racial demographics, particularly in highly segregated cities. Using spatial data on park attributes, home values, and neighborhood demographics in the Twin-Cities area in the United States, we investigated how willingness to pay for park characteristics vary by neighborhood income and race characteristics. Some park attributes such as tree canopy and the presence of a dog park had positive and significant impacts on property values across neighborhoods of varying race and income characteristics, whereas park size, bike trail access, and presence of water bodies in parks had positive or negative effects on property values depending on race and income of the surrounding neighborhoods. Our analysis helps to understand how park investments in neighborhoods of varying race and income may differentially affect housing market dynamics with theoretical and practical implications for addressing green gentrification.
KW - Gentrification
KW - Hedonics
KW - Parks
KW - Segregation
KW - Spatial econometrics
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U2 - 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2025.105340
DO - 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2025.105340
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:86000744873
SN - 0169-2046
VL - 259
JO - Landscape and Urban Planning
JF - Landscape and Urban Planning
M1 - 105340
ER -