Affordability with an Expiration Date: A Microsimulation for Estimating the Demographic Changes Caused by Deregulation of Assisted Housing

Author:

Yavo-Ayalon Sharon1ORCID,Levine Daphna2,Sussman Shai3,Aharon Gutman Meirav3

Affiliation:

1. Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, New York, NY, USA

2. Jacobs Technion Cornell Institute, Cornell Tech, New York, NY, USA

3. Architecture and Town Planning, Technion, Haifa, Israel

Abstract

This research turns the spotlight to the deregulation of once publicly funded affordable housing. Through a microsimulation that follows the conversion from affordable to market-rate units on Roosevelt Island New York, we estimate the expected demographic changes each year between 1976 and 2070. The simulation combines information from the American Community Survey, the island's masterplan, the privatization agreements, and interviews with residents, to produce interactive graphs at three urban scales: the neighborhood, the project, and the building. We found that while the households of market-rate units are gradually becoming younger and more affluent, the households of affordable units are becoming older and more impoverished. Despite an individual agreement for each building, the demographic changes are similar, and that, those changes will affect low-income buildings first. Moreover, upon expiration, 30 percent of the existing protected tenants will be over 65 and at risk of being displaced. The simulation is available at http://ridigitaltwin.pythonanywhere.com/ .

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Urban Studies,Sociology and Political Science

Reference94 articles.

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2. The Housing Question under Capitalist Political Economies

3. Anderson Martin. 1964. “The Federal Bulldozer. A Critical Analysis of Urban Renewal, 1949–1962.”.

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