Quote:
Originally Posted by Crawford
Birth rates & household sizes have never been lower, so it's weird that people still want bigger and bigger homes. How much does it cost to AC a 4,000 sq. ft. home in the summer TX heat? No basements, right? In the north, that would be a 6,000 sq. ft. house, functionally.
Crime rates are near modern-day lows, and I don't think there's any evidence that sprawl is statistically safer than non-sprawl. The opposite is likely true, given the stroads and extreme commuting.
And the highest performing schools are almost always in close-in communities, not sprawl. But those districts usually have much higher home prices.
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A/C bill will depend on a lot of things (shade, how much of the house youre cooling, etc.) so that's hard to say. Crime is at modern day lows sure but there are still levels to it meaning there will still be plenty of high crime areas relative to the low crime suburbs (and yes there's plenty of crime stats to back this up).
For schools, the big city districts typically have a handful of token very good schools and/or magnet programs but you're either buying in a high priced neighborhood or a higher crime/gentrifying neighborhood to get into those. This versus buying in a typical suburban neighborhood where everyone in your neighborhood goes to the school you're zoned to, which is typically higher performing than the same house in the inner city going to its zoned school.
Kind of separate but this is often why in gentryfying neighborhoods the elementary school will be highly rated but it drops significantly once you get into upper levels (parents sending their kids across town to better schools because they have the money). It hurts the community when a good bull of the kids don't go to the neighborhood schools