Inman

Which cities are the most economically integrated?

Alex Mertz / Unsplash

Looking for a home in a neighborhood with a good mix of luxury and affordable homes? Look no further than Seattle or Washington, D.C., a new report from Redfin suggests.

A new report released on Wednesday by the tech-powered brokerage shows that about half of homes in both Seattle and Washington, D.C., are located in economically integrated neighborhoods, or areas with about the same amount of high-end and affordable homes.

Redfin considers an “affordable home” a property with a monthly mortgage payment no greater than 30 percent of the local median monthly household income as of 2019.

Boston and Denver also have a significant number of homes located in economically integrated neighborhoods, at 41.6 percent and 41 percent, respectively.

At the opposite end of the spectrum lie Los Angeles and Oklahoma City, where the vast majority of homes are located in high-end and affordable neighborhoods, respectively.

In Los Angeles, 79.1 percent of homes are located in high-end neighborhoods, and in Oklahoma City, 96.7 percent of homes are in affordable neighborhoods.

However, homeownership in general is much less affordable (and more competitive) in Los Angeles than Oklahoma City, contributing to the city’s low homeownership rate of 36.5 percent, as of 2019. In contrast, a whopping 57.5 percent of residents in Oklahoma City owned a home as of 2019.

With its high concentration of celebrities and gated communities, Los Angeles is a city where wealth tends to concentrate in specific pockets, making economically integrated neighborhoods more of a rarity.

Taylor Marr

“When affluent Americans cluster in luxury gated communities, their wealth stays concentrated in those areas,” Taylor Marr, lead economist at Redfin, said in the report. “When affluent Americans share neighborhoods, parks and restaurants with lower- and middle-income Americans, wealth and economic opportunity is distributed more evenly throughout our cities.”

The economic makeup of a neighborhood can have a big impact on its residents. For instance, children who grow up in neighborhoods with high poverty rates are at a greater risk of health challenges, incarceration and reduced lifetime earnings.

But when lower-income families live in more economically diverse communities, children are more likely to have the same health and economic outcomes as children who come from higher income families, according to Inclusionary Housing.

Still, some neighborhoods that may appear to be very economically integrated right now may simply be in transition, Marr noted.

“Some neighborhoods may appear to have a good balance of affordable and high-end homes, when in reality it’s just an affordable neighborhood transitioning into a high-end neighborhood due to gentrification,” he said.

In Seattle, a push for more housing in recent years and upzoning parts of the city (changing zoning to permit multifamily buildings in some areas in addition to single-family homes) helped it become more economically integrated.

From 2016 to 2020, the number of homes located in economically integrated neighborhoods in the city increased from 48.7 percent to 54.2 percent. At the same time, homes located in high-end neighborhoods decreased from 39.9 percent to 15.6 percent, and homes in affordable neighborhoods rose from 11.3 percent to 30.3 percent.

In D.C., however, the number of homes in economically integrated neighborhoods didn’t see much change from 2016 to 2020. Still, the number of homes located in high-end areas did see a decline, from 32 percent to 15 percent, while homes in affordable neighborhoods rose from 18.6 percent to 35.5 percent.

But, some of the city’s neighborhoods have experienced gentrification in recent years, which could be contributing to its appearance of having more homes in economically integrated areas. The National Community Reinvestment Coalition recently rated D.C. as the 13th most intensely gentrifying city, a fall from its previous 1st-place ranking, but still high on the list.

Daryl Fairweather

In addition to Los Angeles and Oklahoma City, Detroit is another very economically segregated city, with 95.2 percent of homes located in affordable neighborhoods. Meanwhile, only 3.5 percent of the city’s properties are located in economically integrated neighborhoods, and only 1.3 percent are in high-end neighborhoods.

Detroit is highly segregated by economic status,” Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather said in the report. “Although the downtown and midtown areas have gone through a revitalization in recent years, much of the rest of the city remains trapped in a cycle of poverty where low property values lead to underfunding of schools and public services, which causes more affluent residents to leave, and further degrades property values.”

Email Lillian Dickerson