Market rental housing affordability and rapid transit catchments: Application of a new measure in Canada
Authors: Nick Revington and Craig Townsend
Overview
Abstract (English)
In high-income cities, the availability of affordable rental housing in locations served by fast and frequent public transportation enables low-income households access to more opportunities, including jobs, without the costs of owning and operating automobiles. This study operationalizes a residual income approach to identify market rental housing that is affordable to two household configurations (couples with children and couples without children) in two categories below the median income. The study is carried out on Canada’s least and most expensive major metropolitan housing markets, Montreal and Vancouver. In addition to spatially disaggregating the results into inside and outside rapid transit walking catchments, the results are spatially disaggregated into four zones (Urban Core, Inner City, Inner Suburbs, and Outer Suburbs). Implications of the uneven distribution of affordable rentals with respect to transit access are discussed.
Abstract (French)
Please note that abstracts only appear in the language of the publication and might not have a translation.
Details
Type | Journal article |
---|---|
Author | Nick Revington and Craig Townsend |
Publication Year | 2016 |
Title | Market rental housing affordability and rapid transit catchments: Application of a new measure in Canada |
Volume | 26 |
Journal Name | Housing Policy Debate |
Number | 5-Apr |
Pages | 864-886 |
Publication Language | English |
- Nick Revington
- Nick Revington and Craig Townsend
- Market rental housing affordability and rapid transit catchments: Application of a new measure in Canada
- Housing Policy Debate
- 26
- 2016
- 5-Apr
- 864-886