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YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    Suburbs May be Losing Their Luster to Home Buyers

    There are more than 2.4 million homes for sale in the United States and even more in the foreclosure pipeline, and yet builders are still putting up new houses, according to recent construction data.

    Why? It all comes down to the location and condition of existing homes on the market, many of which aren't appealing or suitable for buyers today, experts say.

    "Many dwellings built during the boom years--whether now offered for sale by banks or homeowners wishing to move--are in the wrong locations or badly configured," Peter Morici, professor of economics at the University of Maryland, wrote in an E-mail. "Much of that housing was premised on cheap energy--far from jobs and requiring long commutes and expensive to heat."

    [See photos of new home construction.]

    With gas prices hitting record highs the past few years, long commutes into city centers are becoming pricier, and current and future homeowners are thinking more about proximity to work and play when looking for housing. There's a new emphasis on smaller, better located homes, Morici says, prompting more construction of multi-family residences closer to cities.

    The legacy of the housing bubble and the still-unsteady jobs market has also played a role. "Many young workers may need to move to stay employed and are wary of being tied to a house they may not be able to sell," Morici says. "Hence, more young families are opting to rent."

    All of this adds up to more challenges for the housing market when it comes to selling through the enormous overhang of supply, and calls into the question the dynamics of the housing market going forward. After all, rental housing tends to be concentrated in urban areas, not the suburbs.

    So does a new preference (and in some cases necessity) to rent mean an end to suburbs and a revival of downtown, city living?

    [Read: Why the Foreclosure Settlement Could Mean More Pain for Homeowners.]

    It's too soon to tell, but probably not, says Jed Kolko, chief economist at real estate website Trulia, who attributes the recent uptick in rental demand to shorter-term causes such as tight credit and a bad labor market.

    "Right now people aren't in a good position to buy homes so there's more demand for renting," Kolko says. "But that doesn't necessarily mean a long-term shift away from suburbs."

    That's because whereas in previous times jobs were concentrated in downtown city centers, over time many jobs have moved to suburbs. While that trend could slow if things such as high gas prices or other rules and regulations come into play, the hefty price tag of the convenience and walkability of more urban settings will likely support continued demand for property in cheaper suburbs.

    "Even though people say they'd like to live walking distance to all the restaurants, when they start looking at prices and make decisions, they realize [it] often comes at a high price," Kolko says. "People want as much house for the dollar as they can get."

    [Read: Mortgage Settlement: Do the Big Banks Owe You Money?]

    A lot of public policy supports expansion into suburbs as well. Take for instance recent debates on transportation spending and how much should be allocated to highways versus mass transit. If money is spent building lots of roads, it makes it easier for people to drive long distances and live further away from city centers. On the flipside, more investment in mass transit makes it easier and more convenient to get around in dense cities. "Our transportation investments affect city sprawl," Kolko says.

    Still, in the near term experts predict demand for rental property in close-in neighborhoods will remain high, sparking more new construction to the tune of 8 to 10 percent increases annually. But only time will tell if the bump in housing activity is enough to get the economy out of neutral and into gear.

    mhandley@usnews.com

    Twitter: @mmhandley

    --More Americans Opting for Shorter-Term Mortgage Refis.

    -- Rental Demand Goes Up, Rental Prices Go Down?

    --Want to Own a Piece of NYC? Now You Can.

     

    22 comments

    • John  •  3 mths ago
      Went from the city to the burbs and then onto the country. I will NEVER go back
      • Terence 3 mths ago
        I went from the burbs to the coast and I will never go back.
    • Harry  •  Birmingham, Alabama  •  3 mths ago
      Cities have too many rules and laws. I like to do blacksmithing in my spare time, who would put up with my noise, in the city.
    • Chappy007  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      My dream was to buy a few acres in the country for retirement. Problem is gasoline prices are eating me up. I need to drive into the city so frequently that my gas cards are mounting up.
    • Alex  •  3 mths ago
      One of the benefits to a house in the suburbs is that you don't have to pay to use your own driveway. If you're paying $25 a month (or more) just just to park your car, that kind of eats into any gas savings from not having to commute.

      And public transit can work both ways. An efficient bus/light rail system can make living in-town easier, but commuter rail and park-and-ride systems can also reduce freeway usage while still allowing people to live in suburbs.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Beaverton, Oregon  •  3 mths ago
      I don't like to hear other people's noise, and I don't like other people to complain if I test an airplane engine at midnight, so I live out in the boonies. My neighbors are deer and other critters, and we get along just fine.
      • snyderst80 3 mths ago
        user- i take it you don't care if the "critters" hate the racket produced by your engine testing.....
      • Terence 3 mths ago
        Yeah and 90% of all humans live within ten miles of a coastline so that advice really isn't practical. Human society would literally collapse if everyone tried to live spaced apart from each other.
    • Heff  •  Wyandotte, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      I know the article is supposed to be about how transit dollars are to be spent in the end, but I live in a suburb that is 15 minutes from the center of the city full of rentable homes. It has a quaint downtown area, multiple schools both public and private, and it's one of those don't have to lock your door neighborhoods. With so many people losing their homes, there is little need to build new for renters. So I agree with Talathiel on this one about not building, but disagree in the way that families don't have rental HOME options. They do.
      • David 3 mths ago
        True Heff, families have more rental options available to them now than in past years but, the problem is landlords charge more than what is equitable for a 2-3 bedroom apartment. I am at present paying my landlord's mortgage, lol.
      • A Yahoo! User 3 mths ago
        Whether you live in the city, suburbs or rural areas why wouldn't you lock your doors?
    • Donald  •  3 mths ago
      The other negative is the local gummint can raise your property taxes whenever it feels like it needs more of your blood. The Vampire Party (both red and blue divisions) has arranged that to be.
    • D  •  3 mths ago
      Who would've thought that people who bought ramshackle housing built in far flung corn fields with no real thought put into them more than how to throw them up as quickly as possible would have a difficult time of it now?
    • wow  •  3 mths ago
      I HAVE ONE IN TOWN and ONE IN COUNTRY SIDE. After I retire, I will only keep the one in country side to have my own orchard, gardens and animals. It is much quieter and better air!
    • ELLIOT  •  Miami, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      In South Florida, the suburbs are rather bland and boring. From Homestead in the south of Miami on up to North Palm Beach (a distance of 100 miles) it is continuous and unbroken suburbia, and it all looks the same. Only South Florida cities, like Miami, Miami Beach (South Beach) or Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach offer a sense of distinction and character. The cities down here is where everyone in the suburbs migrate to on a DAILY basis. That's where the sights, entertainment and energy is concentrated. South Florida suburbs are just too plain, like your typical backyard. You grow tired of looking at the "sameness", day in and day out. You can keep suburbia, down here the city wins hands down.
    • Jack  •  New York, New York  •  3 mths ago
      Cities come with layers of civil service employees and bureaucrats demanding high cost pensions and health care and incidental costs and fees... what I save by living in the country is well worth the price of gasoline.
    • Broomstick Johnson  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      Tell that to my friend who bought a house all the way out in b:u:m:f:^:c:k Kendall County, Illinois...
    • john  •  Austin, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      First.....rabble rabble rabble
    • Yanette Guzman  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  3 mths ago
      suburbs should have been kept to a minimum. having so many suburbs throughout the country has increased our auto use which has increase our dependency on oil. much of the country should go back to depending on train to transport millions of people in a day. look asia and how they use mass public transit to get around.. this is somethign america needs to go back to
      • Harry 3 mths ago
        IF YOU CAN SEE YOUR NEIGHBORS FIRE PLACE SMOKE, IT'S TIME TO MOVE ! Now thats the old way.
      • Terence 3 mths ago
        U.S. mass transit sucks compared to Asian mass transit. Ours is slower, using outdated vehicles that don't travel fast enough, reliably enough, or far enough. Public transportation is impractical in so many major urban areas in the U.S.
    • Dan  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 mths ago
      The closer you get to the city the more layers of government spending your money and telling you what you can do,
    • talathiel  •  Raleigh, North Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      thsi also depends upon continuing trends to delaying marriage and delaying or foregoing children. "families" are not going to rent because rental neighborhoods are usually bad neighborhoods; schools in urban and rental areas range from lousy to downright dangerous; and kids need houses, not rickety stinking tenements, to grow up in. But people cannot afford kids anyway, so more people are staying single, and it makes sense for singles to rent. It's like people are delaying growing up until they're growing old.
      • Tomas 3 mths ago
        You do realize there is a spectrum of housing choices not just a single family house and a "rickety stinking tenement." I would venture to say that my apartment is nicer than 95% of single family homes in the US. Also school quality doesn't necessary correspond to urban or rental areas. There are terrible suburban schools and wonderful urban schools. Don't make assumptions if you don't know what you are talking about.
    • Dude!  •  3 mths ago
      Cheap gas subsidized by the U.S. government kept housing prices down in the far-flung suburbs. Now it's more difficult for the suburbanites to get a handout from Uncle Sam. What's happening now was obvious years ago.
    • travis b  •  Minneapolis, Minnesota  •  3 mths ago
      The suburbs are nice if you have no culture and like living in a strip mall. Suburbia is about as visually appealing as a manure pile.
    • John  •  3 mths ago
      Yea but if you move back into the city you have deal with all those naggers!! Naggers and complainers do nothing but #$%$ and complain!
    • Janet  •  Birmingham, Alabama  •  3 mths ago
      I would love to have an old house near the downtown area, but they actually cost a fortune now. The city is becoming gentrified. My house in the 'burbs is very affordable.
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