The Real Purchasing Power Of Central City Neighborhoods
10 July 2001 - 5:00am
The Brookings Institution provides a template to create urban economic profiles that demonstrate the economic potential of central city neighborhoods.
The gap between "urban legends"such as, "no one works in inner-city neighborhoods"and urban realities is wide, and often the private marketing data that people rely on to provide accurate neighborhood information exacerbate these myths, to the detriment of cities, their residents, and businesses that miss urban opportunities. This study explains how researchers in Milwaukee created an alternative to private marketing data, using a variety of local and state data sources, and offers a template for using similar data to create urban economic profiles elsewhere.
Full Story:
Exposing Urban Legends
Source:
The Brookings Institution, July 8, 2001
»
- Login or register to post comments
- Email this page
- Using Adaptive Reuse to Scale the Urban Future - Feb 08, 2012
- The Obama Administration's Crusade for Homeowners - Feb 07, 2012
- Toward a More Inclusive Planning Process - Feb 07, 2012
- A Case Study of Apple Shows Why The US Can't Compete Globally - Jan 23, 2012
- The Innovations Building the Next Economy in 2012 - Jan 18, 2012
“
Its very unsuitability for an urban center justifies its current usage as a suburban or ex-urban pattern.
”


















