City with a Billion Dollar View
The growth and intensification of many urban areas has meant city governments increasingly face pressure to limit development to preserve iconic city views. This is frequently achieved through ‘viewshafts’ or ‘sight lines’ that regulate development height across vast urban landscapes. While prevalen...
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okr-10986-358362021-07-19T16:40:02Z City with a Billion Dollar View Cooper, G.C.K. Namit, K. LAND REGULATION VIEW PROTECTION REAL ESTATE MARKET URBANIZATION SPATIAL ANALYSIS The growth and intensification of many urban areas has meant city governments increasingly face pressure to limit development to preserve iconic city views. This is frequently achieved through ‘viewshafts’ or ‘sight lines’ that regulate development height across vast urban landscapes. While prevalent in many planning rule books, these policies are rarely subjected to rigorous economic appraisal, despite the large costs they can impose on local areas. We use a regression discontinuity to evaluate one such policy in Auckland, New Zealand which bifurcates the central business district (CBD). We find that the net cost of the policy to the local area is NZ$1.366 billion, or 16% of private land value in the CBD. At the margin, the constraint reduces land values by 40%. While removing these policies is not always easy or necessarily desirable, there may be value in optimization. One theoretical viewshaft alignment could reduce the net cost by 43%. 2021-06-24T18:43:22Z 2021-06-24T18:43:22Z 2021-01-02 Journal Article New Zealand Economic Papers 0077-9954 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35836 CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo World Bank Taylor and Francis Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Journal Article New Zealand |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
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LAND REGULATION VIEW PROTECTION REAL ESTATE MARKET URBANIZATION SPATIAL ANALYSIS |
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LAND REGULATION VIEW PROTECTION REAL ESTATE MARKET URBANIZATION SPATIAL ANALYSIS Cooper, G.C.K. Namit, K. City with a Billion Dollar View |
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New Zealand |
description |
The growth and intensification of many urban areas has meant city governments increasingly face pressure to limit development to preserve iconic city views. This is frequently achieved through ‘viewshafts’ or ‘sight lines’ that regulate development height across vast urban landscapes. While prevalent in many planning rule books, these policies are rarely subjected to rigorous economic appraisal, despite the large costs they can impose on local areas. We use a regression discontinuity to evaluate one such policy in Auckland, New Zealand which bifurcates the central business district (CBD). We find that the net cost of the policy to the local area is NZ$1.366 billion, or 16% of private land value in the CBD. At the margin, the constraint reduces land values by 40%. While removing these policies is not always easy or necessarily desirable, there may be value in optimization. One theoretical viewshaft alignment could reduce the net cost by 43%. |
format |
Journal Article |
author |
Cooper, G.C.K. Namit, K. |
author_facet |
Cooper, G.C.K. Namit, K. |
author_sort |
Cooper, G.C.K. |
title |
City with a Billion Dollar View |
title_short |
City with a Billion Dollar View |
title_full |
City with a Billion Dollar View |
title_fullStr |
City with a Billion Dollar View |
title_full_unstemmed |
City with a Billion Dollar View |
title_sort |
city with a billion dollar view |
publisher |
Taylor and Francis |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35836 |
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1764483876854431744 |