Predicting the Future of Your City
Finding Where Housing Will Turn Over in the Next Decade
One of the great challenges for any city is to be ready for the unforeseen — natural disasters, economic trends, shifting demographics. Thanks to easy access to demographic data and the simplification of data analysis tools every planner and policy maker in the country should now be using data to answer our most basic and urgent urban questions. This post will demonstrate how you can predict ahead of time which parts of a city will experience the most dramatic housing turnover in the decade ahead.
Housing turns-over for many reasons, but the aging baby boomers represent an enormous cohort that has stuck tight in their single family homes. However, the boomers will be leaving their homes en masse over the coming decade. The trick will be knowing exactly when and where that turnover will occur. The evidence points to amazing stability in the housing market until right around the age of 80. At that point, turnover is dramatic.
If we know that boomers will be leaving their homes around the age of 80, and we know where those homes are, we can know ahead of time which parts of a community will be most dramatically impacted.
In the following maps lets take a look at applying this methodology to the Raleigh-Durham area.






The best way to view these is to check out the interactive version of this map that allows you to look at individual block groups and really dive into the data for a particular place. When you look at the data, it becomes clear where there will be large pockets of massive change. The impact of this turnover will remake america’s cities, and the cities that prepare will be the winners in the decades ahead.
If anyone would like a map like this for your city, just let us know.