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@article{ Gibson2013,
 title = {Smart growth and the challenge of nimby: multifamily dwellings and their association with single-family house selling prices in Tallahassee, Florida, USA},
 author = {Gibson, Huston and Becker, Mathew},
 journal = {Journal of Urban and Regional Analysis},
 number = {1},
 pages = {77-88},
 volume = {5},
 year = {2013},
 issn = {2067-4082},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.37043/JURA.2013.5.1.4},
 abstract = {Citizens protest development when they consider it undesirable. One type of
development commonly perceived as undesirable by single-family home owners is
proximate multifamily housing, often considered a cause of property devaluation. This
study assesses multifamily housing, by typology, and its monetary association with
proximate single-family housing prices. The research design is a cross-sectional study
using multivariate regression. The unit of analysis is the detached single-family dwelling.
The study population is a sample taken from all arms-length owner-occupied, primary
residence, detached single-family property transactions recorded in Tallahassee-Leon
County, Florida, USA, during 2008. The key findings show no statistically significant
negative associations between multifamily housing and single-family property selling prices
in the sample; in fact, the two were positively correlated. These findings address singlefamily homeowner concerns about proximate multifamily housing and should bolster the
political feasibility of Smart Growth policy, which recommends denser urban infill.},
 keywords = {USA; United States of America; Wohnungsmarkt; housing market; Einfamilienhaus; single-family residence; Mehrfamilienhaus; apartment house; Landnutzung; land utilization; Immobilien; real estate; Abwertung; devaluation; Wohnumgebung; residential environment; Preis; price; Bebauungsdichte; building density; Nachbarschaft; neighborhood}}