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Not really. Every billionaire and ultra wealthy new yorker and bostonian picked up a property there in 2015-2019.. then in April when they came knocking on doors they surveyed that. Would not be surprised to see a decrease next decade. Similar trends happened in MV Ocean County NJ and OCMD
WOW. LA still doesn't hit 4 MM - but holy hell on NYC. Refreshing numbers!
Looking at only city boundaries/population for LA is pretty much meaningless. There are separate municipalities wholly enveloped by the city of LA, such as Beverly Hills, Santa Monica, Culver City, as well as immediately adjacent municipalities like Burbank, Inglewood, Compton, that won't count towards LA city's numbers even though for all intents and purposes they all function as part of "LA."
Not really. Every billionaire and ultra wealthy new yorker and bostonian picked up a property there in 2015-2019.. then in April when they came knocking on doors they surveyed that. Would not be surprised to see a decrease next decade. Similar trends happened in MV Ocean County NJ and OCMD
If that were the case Greater NYC and Greater Boston wouldn’t have been underestimated as well if they all went off to summer homes.
Buffalo’s rebound has been incredible. It’s almost surreal to see the city grow again. In the mid-late 2000s, Rochester was positioned to become the shining jewel of the region. Some predicted the metro to surpass Buffalo’s by the 2020s due to the then-higher GDP, relatively stable business landscape and outlier status as a growing MSA compared to the rapidly shrinking Buffalo-Niagara region. Safe to say, the 2010s were far kinder to Buffalo than anyone could have predicted. It’s become the Columbus of Upstate New York.
Speaking of Columbus, crossing 900,000 is a nice milestone. Their metro area must be creeping up on Cincinnati.
Disappointed to hear about Detroit and Cleveland.
It's time to get high-speed rail, or at least on-time and frequent *higher* speed rail going to Buffalo from NYC. Rail passing through Buffalo is also the Northeast Corridor's gateway to the Upper Midwest as well as to Canada's Windsor Corridor.
Lol, I didn't include Richmond Heights (which also saw an increase over estimated).... or Parma Heights or Middleburg Heights on the westside.
Or Mayfield Heights which actually saw the biggest percentage increase of all of them.
A lot of Heights cities for sure.
At end of the day, Cleveland is declining. It's core county, Cuyahoga, lost well over 15,000 residents. Meanwhile, Columbus added hundreds of thousands. People vote with their bodies....
Not at all. Probably, still, a lot of undercounting in ACK.
There is a large immigrant population on ACK. They had to build and open a new school in 2017 due to overcrowding and a surging student population.
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