Abstract
While urban renewal programs have become widely-used policy measures to target urban development, the reasons why certain areas are more responsive to policy interventions than others are less known. With this study, we address some of these issues by analyzing an urban renewal program in Berlin, Germany, with 22 designated renewal zones between 1990 and 2012. We separately estimate the effects of the renewal policy on property prices for each respective redevelopment area by comparing price developments in these areas to a series of runner-up areas and to geographically close transactions. We find a considerable amount of heterogeneity. While some areas profit from the renewal policies, there are several areas which develop quite differently and end up with a decrease in property prices due to the urban renewal policy.
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Notes
- 1.
Generally, modernization costs for own use or renting can be deducted from taxable income over a runtime of 10–12 years. A detailed explanation is provided in § 154 and 177 in the code of building law (BauGB), and § 7h, 10f, and 11a of the code of income tax law (EStG).
- 2.
Compare (Senatsverwaltung für Stadtentwicklung Berlin,2010), where the local administration (Senatsverwaltung Berlin) provides detailed budget accounting information for the different time periods. More up-to-date figures are not yet available to the best of our knowledge.
- 3.
Traffic Cells (Verkehrszellen) are statistical areas originally used by the local administration to analyze traffic. There exist 323 traffic cells in Berlin, the average size is 2.7 km2 (105 mi2).
- 4.
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We thank the Berlin Committee of Valuation Experts and the Senate Department for Urban Development and the Environment for data provision.
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Ahlfeldt, G.M., Maennig, W., Richter, F.J. (2018). Zoning in Reunified Berlin. In: Lehavi, A. (eds) One Hundred Years of Zoning and the Future of Cities . Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66869-7_6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-66869-7_6
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