A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
8th Design and Decision Support System in Architecture and urban Planning
Heeze, 4-7 July 2006
Lidia DiappiDpt. Architecture and Planning
Politecnico di Milano
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
• A simply preliminary model of Gentrification is presented
• The model is based on the Smith’s Rent Gap Theory
• A Multi Agent simulation approach is adopted to model the Gentrification spread in Milan
• Self organized Criticality (SOC) emerges.
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
Almost every historic city exhibits the Gentrification phenomenon: certain run-down inner-city neighbourhoods at some point suddenly ‘take off’, showing signs of regeneration, spontaneous rehabilitation of buildings and economic revival.
The old community is replaced by a new one, which is young, cultured and affluent, and able to pay rapidly rising real estate prices .
The scale of the phenomenon is the “neighbourhood”, an intermediate scale between a few blocks and statistical urban areas (in Italy).
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
The classical LRT (Ricardo, Von Thünen, Marshall and Alonso) explains land value in terms of “location” and accessibility.
But many cities show decayed neighbourhoods in the city centre.
Empirical evidences against LRT:
•High “Position value” and “accessibility to the centre” do not always mean “high rent” (i.e. the pioneering Hoyt’s analysis on land rent valleys)
•Land rent is affected by land use;
•Land rent depends on spatial context and scale effects.
Gentrification and Land Rent Theory
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
The spatial influence of a degradated block on the neighbouring rents
Real estate values near the “Inganni” social
housing settlement in Milan
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
Gentrification is “..a demand pressure of the suburban middle and upper class which want come
back to the city” ( Ley, 1996),
Changes in lifestyles…”decrease the relative desiderability of single family, suburban homes”
(Lipton,1977)
The “demand side” explanations of Gentrification
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
[Gentrification is] “.. a back to the city movement by capital, not people”
Smith identifies a crucial nexus between property value and land value.
Smith argues that the production of “gentrifiable areas“ is explained in terms on building cycle in
urban neighbourhoods.
The Neil Smith’s “Supply Side” approach
price
house value potential groundrent
capitalized ground rent
rent gap
Time (from construction date)
Dol
lars
The devalorisation cycle and the rise of the rent gap
N. Smith , 1995, The new urban frontier, Routledge, p. 71,
Capitalized ground Rent is “the actual quantity of ground rent that is appropriate by the landowner, given the present land use” (Smith, 1979, p. 543)
Potential ground rent is the rent which might be realized , given the site location, under the “highest and best use”
House value is the construction cost minus the depreciation due to wear and tear
Price is the sum of house value plus the capitalized ground rent
Rent gap is the disparity between the potential ground rent and the actual ground rent capitalized under the present land use
WIDE RENT GAP
REDEVELOPMENT
GENTRIFICATION
NEIGHBOURHOODTENDENCY TORENTAL TENUREUNDERMAINTENANCEOUT FLOWOF CAPITALS INHABITANTS
FILTERING DOWN
REDLINING AND ABANDONMENT
INITIAL DEPRECIATION(WEAR AND TEAR
OBSOLESCENCE IN STYLE,NEED OF MAJOR REPAIRS)
LANDLORDS ANDHOMEOWNERSSELL OUT AND
SEEK NEW HOMES
Capital depreciation in the inner city
1
2
3
4
5
6
SOCIAL SEGREGATION
DISINVESTMENTSBY LANDLORDS ANDFINANCIALINSTITUTIONS
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
In the first stage home owners act individually,
whereas
in the following five stages
the process is brought about by the collective action at the neighbourhood
scale.
The relevance of the neighbourhood
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
AGENTS DECISIONS INFORMATION
Landlords Invest / undermaintain Local
HomeownersInvest and stay / undermaintain and let out
Local
Tenants Stay / move Local/Global
Developers Buy and invest/ wait Global
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
1. Every building is undergoing a continuous decay process, which drops the rent with a constant annual rate λ.
2. Landlords and homeowners decide to invest only if the neighbouring rent is higher than the expected rent after rehabilitation. After rehabilitation: Capitalized rent in i= Neighbouring rent
The transition rules
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
3. Investors perceive the Rent Gap between potential rent and local capitalized rent. Given residual capital availability if PR(i) –CR(i)> orPR(i)/CR(i) > investors choose the locations where to invest among cells showing the highest profitable Rent Gap. After rehabilitation:CR(i,t+1)=PR(i,t)
Transition rules
The Milan case study
• In the last thirty years the housing market in Milan has experienced periodical “bubbles”of real estate market.
• In the same period the city, as many other European cities, had lost most population, approximately 500.000 inhabitants (37%)
• The historical centre is an highly speculative market, where the unsatisfied demand of investments pushes up the prices.The population turn over concerns high income families.
• In the middle peripheral areas the decay process in Milan has been contrasted by the massive renovation process promoted by fiscal incentives and new external demand.
• Population turnover mainly concerns new emerging professionals in design, fashion, communication which deplace middle income families in the suburbs.
• Milan has shown recursive waves of Gentrification affecting central and semicentral rings
Other parameters:
Annual Decay rate λ = 0,02 Available capital = 100.000
Construction cost for each building = 1.000Neighbourhood radius = 10 cells
Capitalised rent ranges from 1.500 to 7.000
Parameters setting
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
Potential rent is assumed to be a conic surface which interpolates the highest rent values for each ring
Parameters setting
y = 6396e-0.028x
R2 = 0.993
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
0 10 20 30 40 50distance from the center
ca
pit
aliz
ed
re
nt
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
Real estate Zoning system : 67 zones identified by Borsino Immobiliare of Camera di Commercio di Milano
The data base supplies mean transaction values (sales) for each zone in the period (every 6 months)for different land uses.These values for residence are the Capitalised rents at time t
1993
Initial state
Maintenance statusFor each zone has been identified a distribution of maintenance
status (Very good, good, bad, very bad) on the base of Census Data 1991. The allocation of the status to each cell has been
implemented through a Monte Carlo procedure.
34.0 - 35.0
33.0 - 34.0
32.0 - 33.0
31.0 - 32.0
30.0 - 31.0
29.0 - 30.0
28.0 - 29.0
27.0 - 28.0
26.0 - 27.0
25.0 - 26.0
24.0 - 25.0
A mas model based on Smith’s RGT
A systematic exploration of the model is already underway, concentrating on the relationships between model parameters and the way different values lead to different spatial pattern.The Smith’s theory has provided a sound starting point for a MAS model.The model was able to give an approximate description of the spatial pattern of Gentrification and their recursive waves. From numerical simulations emerges the key role of potential rent and the way by which rent gap measure influences the evolution of the market.In order to build a more realistic scenario both PR and RG should articulated at local level taking in to consideration local values (historical buildings, accessibility, housing stock level, parks, etc.).Necessity to measure and investigate the elasticity of RG vs. the dynamics of the local R.E. market.
Concluding remarks