evan_aggie said:
One thing I learned from experience, is that market appreciation and demand is so much stronger and protected the closer you are to town.
I owned a home near Cedar Park HS that was purchased in 2009 for $243. I think the current market price is around $375-$390 at best. I see larger homes selling for $425 so not sure.
However, the house I currently live in near 38th and Jefferson was $300 in 2010 and now around $700-$725 if we sold today. If only i bought in 2010.
There is just so much land and competing commutes the further you go out.
What do you think drives that, and will those drivers remain true in the future?
All government jobs, or nearly all I assume, are based downtown and workers for those jobs will want to be close to their place of work - I don't see this changing.
Not all jobs moving to Austin are based downtown, Apple and Tesla and Samsung new or expanded facilities are outside of downtown for example - however, this probably isn't unchanged from the past in that there are a mix of downtown and outside area growth
Pandemic has changed thought processes about working in the office vs from home - will this persist and impact real estate in major cities and even rural areas?
Or does the desire to be downtown have little to do with job location and more to do with liking to be in a dense area, with more dining and entertainment choices within 20 minutes of your house? Or perhaps just for the cachet of "living in town"?
I'm always curious about these societal trends, for the most part the past 20 years seemed to be a resurgence of rehabilitating downtowns and getting more dense downtown residential built - across the nation and also in Austin. Any future trends that might change that, beyond this changed adoption of working remotely?