Quote:
Originally Posted by Steely Dan
University students might be a factor for all three.
They're all relatively small central cities with around 300K people, and all are home to substantial universities within city limits.
Total undergrad students of major universities:
Cincinnati (U.Cincinnati, Xavier): 35K
Pittsburgh (Carnegie-Mellon, Pitt, Duquense, Chatham): 34K
St. Louis (WashU, SLU, UMSL, Maryville): 33K
|
Quote:
Originally Posted by jmecklenborg
These cities are dirt cheap. Many people live alone, without roommates, because you don't need roommates to help pay the rent or mortgage.
|
Speaking as someone on the ground in St. Louis, I would say the city's 2.01 person household size is due to a mix of students, young professionals, and families moving to the suburbs. Of the six largest counties (I'm counting the city as a de facto county) in the metro area, the city ranks dead last in terms of average household size, but third in the overall number of households.
In terms of the different parts of the city, north city is continuing to see black flight for economic, safety, and educational concerns. South city has primarily stabilized, but, similarly to north city, many young couples still pack up and move to the suburbs once they start having kids for better schools and safety as well. That leaves the central corridor, which has been booming here for years in terms of development and added amenities and apartments, and its focus is almost exclusively on young professionals, grad students, undergraduate students, etc. with those developments.