DMZwerg
Senior Member
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2009
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Wisconsin
I am doing an appraisal tomorrow of a property in a neighborhood in a market area area of well over 3,000 homes, with at least 11 seperate named neighborhoods.
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The subject competes with the entire market of 11 contigious neighborhoods. From that market one can extract market data and form an opinion of market value.
Is there any definable motion through the area? (aka, do values change from one "boundary" to an opposite "boundary")
I know of areas where "defined neighborhood" can change by a block for every block you travel east up to a certain point as the typical sales price slowly increases from "the Valley" (effectively a "ghetto") to the lakefront. In such circumstances each street east (or west, north, south) would define a slightly different "neighborhood"/pocket of similar style/use/etc properties and each neighborhood would overlap the one before and after it. Such is not that uncommon when neighborhoods approach different usage areas, in my case between a transportation corridor and a residential-commercial lakefront corridor, but same could decline towards a manufacturing area, etc.
No matter what, defined well enough there shouldn't be a problem with neighborhood boundaries.