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"The downtown neighborhood extends west from the Willamette to Interstate 405 and south from Burnside Street to just south of the Portland State University campus (also bounded by I-405)" |
Downtown New Orleans
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...1129d062_z.jpg -------------------------------- 2020 ------ 2010 ------ 2000 ------ 1990 ------ Growth ------ Density CBD ------------------------------ 4,351 ------ 2,276 ------ 1,794 ------ 1,373 ----- 91.2% ---- 26.9% ---- 30.7% ------- 2.6 km² --- 1,661.3 inh./km² French Quarter ------------------ 3,523 ------ 3,813 ------ 4,176 ------ 4,068 ----- -7.6% ---- -8.7% ----- 2.7% ------- 1.2 km² --- 2,827.4 inh./km² New Orleans Metro Area ---- 1,251,653 -- 1,167,764 -- 1,316,510 -- 1,264,391 ------ 7.2% --- -11.3% ----- 4.1% --- 7,681 km² New Orleans is arguably the most unique metro area in the continental US, but its CBD is also following the national trend and although from a very low base, is growing at a very fast pace. French Quarter surprised me as it seems to have a very well established residential population and I had no idea. I thought it was just an entertainment district. And it is, as the CBD, a White-majority area, while immediatelly north there's one census tract entirely formed by a project which is virtually all-Black. |
I'm surprised the French Quarter lost population. I wonder why?
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About the size, New Orleans that I just posted above, is only slightly larger (2.6 km² vs 2.1 km²). Or Pittsburgh posted few pages back with only 1.4 km², Kansas City (2.3 km²), Denver (2.3 km²), Tampa (1.9 km²). Quote:
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Cleveland getting 7.8 sk and Portland getting 2.1 sk? |
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Specifically about Cleveland, it actually takes less census tracts than Portland. It's only 3 whether Portland's comprises 5. Their domestic airport and their massive docks are all contained there. |
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99% of Cleveland's commercial air passenger traffic goes through the city's main airport, Hopkins. |
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This exercise, while fun and somewhat illustrative of trends, is hardly definitive. There's no definition of city centers, and census tracts aren't apples-apples. Also, I'm not even sure that a high population growth is necessarily a sign of prosperity. The most high-value downtown office cores, places like Midtown Manhattan and Downtown DC, had limited population growth. This is because the highest and best use of land is for commercial uses. If the highest and best use shifted to residential, and former trophy office space were converted to apartments, that would arguably be a sign of relative weakness, not strength. |
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Most short term rentals are effectively illegal in NYC. Doesn't mean NYC doesn't have a huge market for such services. I suspect NOLA is similar.
I believe NYC is the largest or second largest AirBnB market worldwide, but in order to legally rent a place out, the owner/lessee would need to be physically present the whole time (yeah, right), no locks would be available on any room, and I think you would need to certify to the city that the guests are staying for non-leisure purposes. There are even short-term rentals in housing projects. They're everywhere. |
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I calculated some figures for Australia’s two biggest cities, Sydney and Melbourne. They are seeing the same trends as North American cities. The earliest figures I could find were from 2001.
Sydney Strict downtown definition using the ‘Sydney-Haymarket-The Rocks’ Statistical Area 2 (SA2), covering the core central business district. This has an area of 4.3km2. It has seen good growth but the local government prefers to focus on non-residential development here and it is the least dense part of central Sydney. 2001 – 14,393 2010 – 24,359 2020 – 33,238 Density in 2020 – 7,742/km2 Using a wider downtown definition including the neighbourhoods immediately surrounding the core. This includes the ‘Pyrmont-Ultimo’, ‘Surry Hills’, ‘Potts Point-Woolloomooloo’, ‘Darlinghurst’ and ‘Redfern-Chippendale’ SA2’s and has an area of 11.7km2. 2001 – 79,412 2010 – 108,970 2020 – 141,204 Density in 2020 – 12,068/km2 Melbourne Strict downtown definition using the ‘Melbourne’ SA2, which covers the traditional grid forming Melbourne’s CBD. This has an area of 2.4km2 and has seen impressive growth over the past 20 years. 2001 – 7,644 2010 – 20,382 2020 – 53,180 Density in 2020 – 22,448/km2 Using a wider downtown definition covering the ‘Docklands’, ‘Southbank’ and ‘Carlton’ SA2s. This has an area of 9.7km2 and has added over 100,000 people in less than 20 years. It’s transformed from a 9-5 office district surrounded by light industry to a dense mixed use downtown over this period. 2001 – 21,657 2010 – 53,218 2020 – 122,097 Density in 2020 – 12,587/km2 |
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That's a fantasy among fan boards. It's not how cities work in real life. |
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And racial divide is very stark: on French Quarter, Whites outnumber Blacks in a 11:1 ratio. On tracts immediatelly northwest of it, Blacks are the vast majority. |
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Downtowns once again growing is a first pretty much since their inception. |
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Rio de Janeiro has its domestic airport Downtown, like half mile away from the tall office buildings, but it handles 11 million passengers/year, cornerstone of the "air bridge" between Rio and São Paulo. It functions pretty much as those central stations in European cities. Quote:
In any case, most cities saw substantial increases in their very core, not relying on booming adjacent districts: Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Denver, San Diego, Houston, Atlanta, Pittsburgh, Cleveland, just to mention a few. Downtown Portland didn't behave the same. |
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chicago once had a very similar general aviation airport on its lakefront just south of downtown called Meigs Field. after the city engaged in a decades long battle with state officials to close it, King Richard II infamously sent in bulldozers to literally tear up the runaway in the middle of the night roughly 2 decades ago in the name of "homeland security". today the former airport is now ~50 acres of additional publicly-accessible lakefront parkland called Northerly Island Park, and is also home to a 30,000 capacity outdoor concert venue. |
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I think you’re misunderstanding. The Goose Hollow and Pearl neighborhoods are part of Portland’s “downtown” core, despite having a distinct name. |
Downtown Charlotte
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...565ff513_z.jpg ------------------------------ 2020 ------ 2010 ------ 2000 ------ 1990 ------ Growth ------ Density Downtown --------------------- 16,581 ----- 12,489 ------ 5,237 ------ 5,011 ----- 32.8% --- 138.5% ----- 4.5% ------- 5.6 km² --- 2,987.0 inh./km² Charlotte Metro Area ------ 2,638,274 -- 2,217,030 -- 1,717,372 -- 1,341,710 ----- 19.0% ---- 29.1% ---- 28.0% -- 13,121 km² Uptown Charlotte (I learned they call Uptown their Downtown) is another loop-defined Downtown and takes a rather big area and therefore growth patterns changed from yard to yard. The bulk of it took place where the tall office skyscrapers are, while some tracts even lost population (the easternmost one). Even though growth hasn't been as spectacular as Atlanta Downtown-Midtown axis, it's still moving at the right direction. |
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*Purple Line extension to 6th Street in the Arts District just secured funding. With a subway station planned at 7th/Alameda as well, I'd say a good 85% (or so) of everything between Alameda, LA River, and the two freeways will be within reasonable walking distance (no more than 0.6 miles) of a rail station. |
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200,000, however, is attainable which would be enough to make the region to be completely unrecognizable. I really hope subway changes Los Angeles, creating a real urban culture and way of life. |
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The Arts District is massive, and already has a ton of highrise proposals. Office too. South Park will continued adding 30-50 story buildings. |
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Yes it's time to speculate about 2030!
For 2020, I have greater Downtown Seattle at 131,507 for a 4.76-square-mile area. Alternatively 84,971 in 2.71 square miles. I'd be very happy with 40% growth for both of those, but it could be hard to do. The first 15% will be easy (wild guesstimate) -- simply fill the buildings that were still in lease-up on 4/1/20, have opened since, or are underway now. But there's the rub (one of them) -- only starts over the next six or maybe seven years will matter. A large building will typically need to finish by late 2029 to be more than half full on 4/1/30, and you can back start dates more than two years if it's large enough -- some to mid/early 2027. For smaller buildings early 2028 will be ok. There's not much time. If that 15% gets us to 151,000, we'll need another 33,000 to get to 184,000. So at least 22,000 more starts from now to 2028 assuming a 1.5 ratio. That's less than the same period in the last decade, but still a big number. Much of the last decade's growth was on easy sites, though we've done a ton of harder sites too. A larger percentage of the next 6-7 years of projects will be harder sites, in terms of economies of scale, the ability to include parking in any quantity, land cost, and the need to keep/restore historic elements. Parking ratios will probably need to come down even further, including a larger percentage with none. It can be done if demand is high to live near work, or if greater Downtown is highly desired for lifestyle. That seems plausible and even likely based on current demand, which has sharply rebounded since early Covid. But sooo many uncertainties. |
There are many reasons why downtown populations are soaring and here are a few key ones:
First, declining incomes relative to the cost of a house. Housing prices have uniformly risen significantly faster than incomes in the last 40 to 50 years and hence the SFH is not optional for many especially the working class. In very expensive cities like Vancouver, SFH are only for the wealthy. Second, women entering the workforce. Up until 1980 most women didn't work outside the home and certainly not full-time. They were "home makers" and had the time to maintain the SFH home and now they don't and so want smaller homes that are easier to maintain. Third, fewer kids. As the family size has shrunk considerably, there is no longer the need or desire to have a big suburban home with a big lot and so apt living {which is overwhelmingly downtown/inner city} is now practical. Fourth, declining crime rates. Generally crime rates are lower today than they were in the 1970s due, in large part, because of an older population. People are far more likely to commit crime {which was traditionally higher in downtown areas} in the 15 to 35 demographic cohort than those in the 35 to 55 range. Fifth, better race relations. This is particularly true in the US where living beside a black person no longer scares the white person to flee to the suburbs. White flight is effectively over. This has also not just brought more people downtown but generally higher income ones and the political power that comes with leading to better urban amenities and a more pleasant urban realm. |
The biggest reasons have more to do with (a) the convenience of being close to work, (b) a desire to live where the action is, and (c) an exploding number of singles and couples with no kids. Some of that overlaps your points.
Point b is furthered by the upward spiral of more people bringing more services and cool things which bring more people. |
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At 75,000, DTLA is already 38% of the way to “attainable” 200,000 — with a shit ton of room to go vertical. The population grew by 20,000+ with relatively few skyscrapers to show for it. What’s going to happen when DTLA finally undergoes Toronto/Vancouver/Miami-ization? I’d be worried frankly if 200,000 was considered a target goal, because that would represent a density of 45,000. Vancouver’s West End is 62,000 per square mile, and it’s not even particularly tall. For DTLA, I think anything short of 350,000 is not ambitious enough. |
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Numbers involved would be much more challenging in DTLA. Central Chicago (page 2), for instance, in 23 km², has "only" 225k inh. (2020). I added up all the neighbourhoods of Central Los Angeles (Downtown, Chinatown, Echo Park, Westlake, Pico-Union, Silver Lake, Los Feliz, East Hollywood, Koreatown) and in 66 km², has 479k adding only 10k over 2010. 500k inh. would be something unprecedent outside NYC and it would require a population boom in the whole metro area to support such large increase. |
I'm talking about max potential, not trajectile conjecture. I believe 200,000 is more than within the current trajectory based on the previous decade's growth rate, the projects that are on the table (under construction, approved, and proposed), and a general sense that DTLA, while it's made considerable progress since 2000, has really yet to take off. It's also what the Department of City Planning projects as part of their DTLA 2040 plan -- 125,000 new residents by the year 2040.
https://urbanize.city/la/post/stakeh...dtla-2040-plan But, again, that's only about 45,000 per square mile... the same density as Brooklyn's Park Slope. |
Everything (or just about) on the table (under construction, approved, proposed):
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...3b016bdf_b.jpg SSP/DoctorBoffin 3X-large: https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...56f38eb_3k.jpg That's the view from the 110 at MLK Blvd., so the foreground isn't DTLA. The cluster of brown high-rises to the far right are a project along Mesquit (between 6th and 7th) in the Arts District. The taller set of skyscrapers to its left are part of a project proposed for 6th/Alameda. Like I said, a lot of room for a lot more than 200K. |
Looks impressive, right?
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...9409de34_o.jpg SSP/DoctorBoffin But wait, that's just the tip of the iceberg... https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...48e06741_o.jpg SSP/DoctorBoffin https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...e8af1402_b.jpg SSP/DoctorBoffin https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...c85cf1c0_b.jpg SSP/DoctorBoffin |
Awesome. It will look like some futuristic Los Angeles movie. Take a night shot, with a nice filter and you have Blade Runner.
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Downtown Cincinnati
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...392aa98c_z.jpg ------------------------------ 2020 ------ 2010 ------ 2000 ------ 1990 ------ Growth ------ Density Downtown ---------------------- 6,629 ------ 5,657 ------ 4,303 ------ 4,649 ---- 17.2% ---- 31.5% ---- -7.4% ------- 2.7 km² --- 2,486.5 inh./km² Over-the-Rhine ---------------- 5,622 ------ 6,064 ------ 6,439 ------ 8,353 ---- -7.3% ---- -5.8% --- -22.9% ------- 1.1 km² --- 5,019.6 inh./km² Cincinnati ------------------ 309,317 ---- 297,098 ---- 330,796 ---- 364,831 ----- 4.1% --- -10.2% ---- -9.3% ----- 201.6 km² --- 1,534.3 inh./km² Cincinnati Metro Area ----- 2,241,397 -- 2,121,683 -- 2,001,353 -- 1,837,151 ----- 5.6% ----- 6.0% ----- 8.9% -- 10,833 km² Downtown Cincinnati is a very constrict area, boxed by the highways and the hills. Growth wasn't as impressive as we've seen elsewhere, but it seems solid. As it's immediately north of Downtown, I decided to bring Over-the-Rhine. It still posts population losses and now might be a sign of gentrification, I don't know. And maybe the most remarkable thing here is the city of Cincinnati itself, posting growth for the first time since 1940-1950. |
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I dont think outsiders are really aware of the change that will happen. |
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I'd rather they add towers and midrise along the major arterials.
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Little Tokyo? Arts District? Historic Core? Chinatown? Fashion District? These places don't exist in another sunbelt city downtown. |
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Just wait till Westlake/MacArthur is cornered on all sides with development. It will pop like CRAZY. |
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Major high rises across the 110 would be insane as well, leading all the way to Westlake. |
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