Quote:
Originally Posted by eschaton
My only point was a lot of the neighborhoods which are dense in terms of population aren't all that dense in terms of built form, or even number of households.
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ok. i was really just refuting your
"almost all" statement.
yes, many of milwaukee's densely populated tracts are made up of workers cottages on the SW side filled to the gills with latino immigrants.
but that is absolutely not the full extent of milwaukee's respectably dense urban neighborhoods.
Quote:
Originally Posted by eschaton
Looking on Social Explorer at the 2016 ACS data, this is wrong. The five tracts which make up Over-The-Rhine have densities of 14,770, 14,336, 12,252, 7,919, and 7,012.
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i was including "adjacent areas":
tract 26 had a density of 15,872 ppsm.
and i was using older data from 2012, so apparently OTR population density is dropping as it gentrifies (not surprising).