Thursday, September 2, 2010


 





Real Estate Economics Abstract Detail

Title: Parking Externalities in Commercial Real Estate
Author(s): Bowman Cutter, Autumn DeWoody
Journal: Real Estate Economics
Volume 38, Issue 2, 2010

Local governments have employed a variety of strategies to reduce street congestion through an increase in parking supply. Shoup (2005) has criticized these policies as an implicit subsidy that shifts costs from drivers to the public at large. Others have noted that parking lots and structures can lead to increased water and air pollution. However, there has not been an examination of whether parking, presumably by reducing congestion, generates external benefits. We measure whether nearby parking availability influences commercial property prices after controlling for property characteristics, including on-site parking. We find that that publicly accessible parking, such as commercial parking garages, generates significant aggregate externalities. We also find evidence of significant complementary relationship between building and parking area in property values. This suggests that parking regulation could have a significant impact on property development through its effect on the value of the marginal square foot of building area.

 
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