Things Don't Change That Fast—Including the Housing Market

Digging into the data to get beyond the misleading notion of radical change in development patterns.

5 minute read

July 9, 2015, 5:00 AM PDT

By Steven Polzin


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Incorporated in 1977, Apple is now the highest valued corporation in history. The public was first introduced to the cell phone in 1983. The Segway was introduced in 2001 with great fanfare. The smart phone debuted less than a decade ago. Some things change fastparticularly those associated with technology—but some things don't change so fast. Some changes can transform life as we know it (like the smart phone), while others fail to deliver on huge expectations (like the Segway).

If one were dining exclusively on a menu of contemporary media headlines over the past few years, they may have presumed that the suburbs were being auctioned off for pennies on the dollar while millennials and empty-nest baby boomers were in bidding wars for downtown condominiums and a burgeoning supply of infill apartments in the urban core. Understanding the nature of how communities and infrastructure change requires a broader perspective—driven by data, not just anecdotes. 

Infrastructure, including our inventory of housing and our transportation systems, doesn't change very fast. The cost of these assets and the life over which these investments must be amortized effectively preclude rapid changes. The aspirations of planners and policymakers for a different future have to be bound by how massively fixed infrastructure mitigates the pace of change.

Much of the attention of the planning community, particularly the transportation planning community, has focused on land use and transportation infrastructure systems intended to achieve the objectives of livability and sustainability. The bust of the housing bubble in 2007, rising energy prices, the emergence of communications as a substitute for travel, concerns about health and obesity, and emerging evidence of different interests of the millennial generation have all inspired dramatic speculation regarding the future of development and transportation investment. Respected analysts were predicting the demise of single-family housing and a drastic shrinkage of average household square footage. A renewed interest in core urban residential development—made highly visible by the physical presence of central business district apartment and condominium towers—and the bubbly enthusiasm of media friendly to central business districts has only heightened expectations.

But the data didn't cooperate. Yes, things are changing, but the increments of change are very small and their consequence in the context of the totality of transportation and land use infrastructure is almost de minimis. Figure 1 below plots housing unit permit activity in the United States since 1980 by number of dwelling units per structure. The figure reveals the dramatic drop off in construction after 2005 and its relatively muted recovery since then. Of more interest is the comparison of both the number and share of single-family homes versus the number of units in structures with five or more units. The Burgundy line (the right-hand axis label) indicates that single-family homes have constituted between 60 and 80 percent of the new units almost continuously since 1980. The most recent data suggests continued softening in the share of single-family homes, but these changes are far from dramatic. 

Figure 1 – U.S. Dwelling Unit Permit Trends by Dwelling Units per Structure

Source data: http://www.census.gov/construction/bps/stateannual.html

Single-family homes are of interest because historically single-family homes make it difficult to have the dense activity pattern that are more easily able to be served with adequate public transportation and sufficiently dense activity distributions to enable bikable and walkable communities. Obviously there are single-family homes located in areas with great multimodal access, but it is mathematically more challenging to accommodate population in single-family homes while still offering the livability and sustainability benefits planners often seek. Of course, aggregate national trends also don't tell the whole story. Issues such as occupancy levels, structure size, lot size, and the proximity of structures to activity clusters (as well as whether developments are infill, replacement, or greenfield developments) can all influence how competitive various mobility options to serve these units can be.

To add further context, the data in Figure 1 should be put in perspective with the total dwelling unit inventory in the country. Figure 2 shows the housing unit inventory by dwelling units per structure for occupied units based on the American Community Survey. The United States had almost 133 million housing units in 2013. Of these, nearly 90 million, or 71 percent, were single-family units. Thus, the current rate of 1 million new units per year is under 1 percent of the housing stock. That number is close to the rate of population growth (also estimated to be less than 1 percent per year) but leaves no room to offset demolished units—thus, dwelling unit growth and replacement is not keeping up with population growth. Absorption of vacant inventory and changes in average number of residents per dwelling unit been accommodating population growth. 

Figure 2 – U.S. Housing Unit Inventory by Dwelling Units per Structure

Source data: 2013 American Community Survey

Perhaps most significant in the comparison of these numbers is the fact that the tiny incremental contribution of new construction has only a slightly lower share of single-family units (61 percent) than the average existing inventory (71 percent). At that pace of change it would be decades before there was any discernible change in the overall housing inventory composition. Even if zero net new single-family homes were built going forward, the share of single-family homes among the total residential inventory would only decline by about 10 share points per decade.

The substantial existing inventory of residential structures and the inventory of structures devoted to other uses, from retail to education to health care to employment, highly influence our transportation needs and the nature of economically viable transportation infrastructure and services. New technologies, new business models, innovative strategies, and great planning can all help in providing high-quality mobility while mitigating the negative externalities of travel, but it's important to acknowledge that the huge inventory of fixed land use infrastructure isn't going to change very fast.


Steven Polzin

Dr. Polzin is a research professor at TOMNET University Transportation Center School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment at Arizona State University in Tempe, Arizona. Dr. Polzin carries out research in mobility analysis, public transportation, travel behavior, planning process development, and transportation decision-making. Dr. Polzin is on the editorial board of the Journal of Public Transportation and serves on several Transportation Research Board and APTA Committees.

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