flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

These 25 cities have the highest urban infill development potential

Market Data

These 25 cities have the highest urban infill development potential

The results stem from a COMMERCIALCafé study.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | May 17, 2018

According to a new study from COMMERCIALCafé, Dallas leads the way as the city in the United States with the highest potential for urban infill development. The results are based on the total developable vacant land available in each city’s central business district.

Dallas has a total of 86.37 acres of developable land in its central business district, 11 more than the second place city of Las Vegas, which has 75.16 acres. Austin (70.72), San Antonio (42.39), and Phoenix (31.03) round out the top five.

An additional COMMERCIALCafé survey asked individuals living in the top 25 cities what they want to see built in their city’s urban core and what they felt the city needs most. Affordable housing was the most common answer for what a given respondent’s city needs at 82%. Housing and parks were the most desired improvements at 77%. Additionally, walkability was the top infrastructure improvement highlighted in all 25 cities.

Click here for the full study.

 

See Also: Construction costs surge in April as new tariffs and other trade measures lead to significant increases in materials prices

 

Related Stories

Market Data | Mar 29, 2017

Contractor confidence ends 2016 down but still in positive territory

Although all three diffusion indices in the survey fell by more than five points they remain well above the threshold of 50, which signals that construction activity will continue to be one of the few significant drivers of economic growth.

Market Data | Mar 24, 2017

These are the most and least innovative states for 2017

Connecticut, Virginia, and Maryland are all in the top 10 most innovative states, but none of them were able to claim the number one spot.

Market Data | Mar 22, 2017

After a strong year, construction industry anxious about Washington’s proposed policy shifts

Impacts on labor and materials costs at issue, according to latest JLL report. 

Market Data | Mar 22, 2017

Architecture Billings Index rebounds into positive territory

Business conditions projected to solidify moving into the spring and summer.

Market Data | Mar 15, 2017

ABC's Construction Backlog Indicator fell to end 2016

Contractors in each segment surveyed all saw lower backlog during the fourth quarter, with firms in the heavy industrial segment experiencing the largest drop.

Market Data | Feb 23, 2017

Entering 2017, architecture billings slip modestly

Despite minor slowdown in overall billings, commercial/ industrial and institutional sectors post strongest gains in over 12 months.

Market Data | Feb 16, 2017

How does your hospital stack up? Grumman/Butkus Associates 2016 Hospital Benchmarking Survey

Report examines electricity, fossil fuel, water/sewer, and carbon footprint.

Market Data | Feb 1, 2017

Nonresidential spending falters slightly to end 2016

Nonresidential spending decreased from $713.1 billion in November to $708.2 billion in December.

Market Data | Jan 31, 2017

AIA foresees nonres building spending increasing, but at a slower pace than in 2016

Expects another double-digit growth year for office construction, but a more modest uptick for health-related building.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021