Edward
December 23rd, 2002, 01:00 AM
"The State of New York City's Housing and Neighborhoods, 2002" — a community-by-community look at indicators like housing prices, mortgage originations, foreclosures, tax delinquencies and vacancy rates — is being offered to the public by the Furman Center for Real Estate and Urban Policy at the New York University School of Law. The report, which includes 475 tables and maps, also tracks shifts in population, income, crime and school achievement levels.
"The data allows people in these communities to plan for future needs," said Prof. Michael Schill, the N.Y.U. center's director, who prepared the report with two research fellows, Denise Wallin and Glynis Daniels. The housing and neighborhood report is available, at no cost, at
http://www.law.nyu.edu/realestatecenter/
or by e-mailing creup@juris.law.nyu.edu.
[hr]
The report -
http://www.law.nyu.edu/realestatecenter/CREUP_Papers/State_of_the_City/HousingNYC2002.pdf
makes for very entertaining reading. The 413 pages of the report contain New York City maps by neighborhood of median monthly rent, median percent of household income spent for rent; percent white population, black, asian, hispanic; median household income, households receiving public assistance; percent of people with less than a high school education, percent of people with a graduate or professional degree; crime rates.
"The data allows people in these communities to plan for future needs," said Prof. Michael Schill, the N.Y.U. center's director, who prepared the report with two research fellows, Denise Wallin and Glynis Daniels. The housing and neighborhood report is available, at no cost, at
http://www.law.nyu.edu/realestatecenter/
or by e-mailing creup@juris.law.nyu.edu.
[hr]
The report -
http://www.law.nyu.edu/realestatecenter/CREUP_Papers/State_of_the_City/HousingNYC2002.pdf
makes for very entertaining reading. The 413 pages of the report contain New York City maps by neighborhood of median monthly rent, median percent of household income spent for rent; percent white population, black, asian, hispanic; median household income, households receiving public assistance; percent of people with less than a high school education, percent of people with a graduate or professional degree; crime rates.