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Posts by Nick Revington

Build baby build? Housing submarkets and the effects of new
construction on existing rents

Anthony Damiano and Chris Frenier
aUniversity of Minnesota; bHealth Care Cost Institute
ABSTRACT
There is vigorous debate among scholars, and activists about the role that new market-rate apartments play in alleviating housing affordability issues at the neighborhood level. This study evaluates how new large (>50 units)
market-rate apartment buildings affect rents in nearby buildings. In contrast to other recent work, we posit that the effects of new construction may vary by the quality of existing housing. We test this hypothesis by using a panel of building-level rents from Minneapolis, Minnesota, observed between 2000
and 2018. While we find no effect of new high-end housing on the market overall, we find countervailing effects of new construction on different parts of the rental market when broken out separately. We find that lower-priced rental housing close to new construction had rents 4.4% higher than those in
other low-quality buildings farther away in the first 5 years after new construction. In contrast, we find that new construction had the opposite effect on higher-priced housing: rents were 1.7% lower near new construction. This study reiterates the importance of housing submarket theory and how focusing solely on average effects of housing interventions may miss important and nuanced effects across different parts of the market.

Build baby build? Housing submarkets and the effects of new construction on existing rents Anthony Damiano and Chris Frenier aUniversity of Minnesota; bHealth Care Cost Institute ABSTRACT There is vigorous debate among scholars, and activists about the role that new market-rate apartments play in alleviating housing affordability issues at the neighborhood level. This study evaluates how new large (>50 units) market-rate apartment buildings affect rents in nearby buildings. In contrast to other recent work, we posit that the effects of new construction may vary by the quality of existing housing. We test this hypothesis by using a panel of building-level rents from Minneapolis, Minnesota, observed between 2000 and 2018. While we find no effect of new high-end housing on the market overall, we find countervailing effects of new construction on different parts of the rental market when broken out separately. We find that lower-priced rental housing close to new construction had rents 4.4% higher than those in other low-quality buildings farther away in the first 5 years after new construction. In contrast, we find that new construction had the opposite effect on higher-priced housing: rents were 1.7% lower near new construction. This study reiterates the importance of housing submarket theory and how focusing solely on average effects of housing interventions may miss important and nuanced effects across different parts of the market.

Newly published housing research! We find that the effects of new construction on rents varies by the quality of the existing housing. In the first 5 years rents went up 4.4% near low quality buildings and went down 1.7% near high quality buildings (1/x) 🧵
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....

4 weeks ago 101 35 4 7

A classic gag!

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

Absolutely agree.

1 month ago 1 0 0 0

That title though 🔥

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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Assistant Professor of Urban Geography/Climate Crisis

Be our colleague… Hiring an Assistant Prof of Urban Geography & Climate Crisis.

www.sfu.ca/geography/ab...

3 months ago 16 17 1 1

What a remarkably stupid own goal... 😒

5 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Deux pistes cyclables à Montréal qui compétitionnent avec trois ponts de New York. Je pense que nous ne réalisons pas la chance que nous avons que le vélo prenne une aussi grande place dans notre mobilité collective à Montréal.

www.lapresse.ca/dialogue/chr...

5 months ago 85 27 3 2
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Opinion: How much are MPs entitled to know about research grants? Not as much as they think A parliamentary committee is asking for academics’ private information on a strange anti-DEI crusade

How much are MPs entitled to know about research grants? Not as much as they think. A parliamentary committee is asking for researchers' personal information in what seems like an anti-DEI crusade, by @picardonhealth.bsky.social www.theglobeandmail.com/opinion/arti... via @theglobeandmail.com

5 months ago 95 65 3 21
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5 months ago 24 21 0 7
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📣 I'M HIRING! Please spread the word 📣

🔎 Looking for a 1-year postdoctoral research associate to support @sensory-lives-prj.bsky.social & UK-wide tour of a playhouse tent communicating neurodivergent children’s experiences of Temporary Accommodation.

🛜 www.jobs.ac.uk/job/DOL488/p...

7 months ago 25 41 1 1

A reminder of the deadline for this Call for Papers coming up:

8 months ago 5 1 0 0
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Crise du logement | Jeunes, diplômés et sans logis Emmanuel Turgeon, 25 ans, est diplômé en éducation spécialisée et père d’un jeune garçon de 15 mois. Durant un mois, l’hiver dernier, il s’est retrouvé à la rue.

“Depuis quelques années, « le coût du logement devient un facteur beaucoup plus important dans la production de l’itinérance », ajoute Nick Revington [ @nickrevington.bsky.social ]
professeur d’études urbaines à l’Institut national de recherche scientifique.”

8 months ago 4 1 1 0
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📣 Call for Papers:
Debt Urbanism and the Housing Question

ℹ️ I'm putting together a symposium proposal to The International Journal of Urban and Regional Research (IJURR) with co-editors @sklosterkamp.bsky.social & Mel Nowicki

🗓️ Deadline for abstracts 22 August 2025

🏹 Please spread the word!

9 months ago 20 15 0 3

Feel free to share widely…

jobs.utoronto.ca/job/Toronto-...

9 months ago 4 5 0 0

I can't look away!

11 months ago 0 0 0 0

This is, in our view, a crucial dynamic in understanding the emergence of "total-life landlordism" and the increasing attention to "beds sectors" by real estate investors.

11 months ago 0 0 0 0

We draw on the case of the co-living sector in Brussels to argue that we are witnessing a process of life course segmentation - a form of class monopoly rent - enabling rent extraction across a wider swath of the life course, but also deepening the extraction of rent at each life course stage.

11 months ago 0 0 1 0
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Left of image is Sickos, your favourite window staring friend going "YES HA HA HA YES!"

Right of image is a French revolution era Sickos, Monsieur Pervers, saying "OUI, HON HON HON, OUI!"

Left of image is Sickos, your favourite window staring friend going "YES HA HA HA YES!" Right of image is a French revolution era Sickos, Monsieur Pervers, saying "OUI, HON HON HON, OUI!"

Everyone watching Pierre Poilievre eat absolute shit in Carleton and respecting Canada's bilingual culture.

11 months ago 15984 3250 69 92
A poster that reads "International Conference on Urban Affairs, Friday April 18, 2025, 8:20AM - 9:40AM: Ideologies of Homeownership Versus Homeowner Ideologies: Tensions and Contradictions by Nick Revington"

A poster that reads "International Conference on Urban Affairs, Friday April 18, 2025, 8:20AM - 9:40AM: Ideologies of Homeownership Versus Homeowner Ideologies: Tensions and Contradictions by Nick Revington"

Looking forward to speaking about young adults' access to homeownership at the Urban Affairs Association Conference on Friday, specifically, the tensions between the ideologies of homeownership underpinning Canadian housing policy and the homeowner ideologies of those looking to buy a first home.

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

Mental health concerns were an overriding reason for moving, followed by physical wellness. Some, but not all, outcomes of moves differed by gender, race, and students’ geographic origin.

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

We found that non-male respondents and non-Québec residents were more likely to effectuate pandemic-related moves, and that moves were also associated with financial precarity.

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
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Students’ residential mobility during the COVID-19 pandemic: evidence from Québec, Canada Many students face considerable housing precarity given their frequent moves, short-term stays in their city of study, and limited incomes, which may make them more susceptible to pandemic-related ...

Our long-overdue article on students' residential mobility in Québec during the COVID-19 pandemic is finally published!

Free e-prints here: www.tandfonline.com/eprint/NA9PN...

1 year ago 2 0 1 0

Left and right, sure. Middle... not so sure.

1 year ago 0 0 1 0
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Housing advantage, hidden curriculum, habitus: students’ past and future housing pathways revisited While past research into young people’s transitions out of the parental home identified a distinct student housing pathway offering an institutionally supported ‘housing advantage’, more recently s...

Housing advantage, hidden curriculum, habitus: students’ past and future housing pathways revisited
Nick Revington
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....

1 year ago 1 1 1 0
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Studentscapes, student bubbles, and studentification: What do student geographies of housing tell us about urban space? (Nick Revington, INRS-Urbanisation, Culture et Société) Abstract: As private university residences have emerged as a new frontier of investment by sophisticated financial actors, international students have also become scapegoats of Canada’s housing afford...

Montrealers! I'll be speaking at the Department of Geography at McGill next Friday (Feb 28) on studentscapes, student bubbles and studentification, or what student geographies of housing can tell us about urban space.

Details here: www.mcgill.ca/geography/ch...

1 year ago 3 1 0 0
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Housing advantage, hidden curriculum, habitus: students’ past and future housing pathways revisited While past research into young people’s transitions out of the parental home identified a distinct student housing pathway offering an institutionally supported ‘housing advantage’, more recently s...

My article on students' housing experiences in Waterloo, with some reflections on how student housing pathways are theorized, now has an issue number in the Journal of Youth Studies! @youthstudies.bsky.social
E-prints here: www.tandfonline.com/eprint/IEXRW...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Amazing, congrats!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Stupid for a lot of reasons, and this is nowhere near the top, but the assumption that we (Canadians) would vote for the Dems and not, say, a third party that exists solely for regaining independence seems... underappreciated.

1 year ago 3 0 0 0

🥚: fried (sunny side up)
🥩: medium-rare
🥛: definitely not in tea or coffee, ok on its own but rarely drink it
🍷: a crisp, refreshing lager or full-bodied red wine like malbec
☕️: tea, strong and black
🥤: iced/sweet tea or ginger ale

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Félicitations encore une fois, Guylaine!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0