A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Annual Housing Survey: 1980. Housing Characteristics for Selected Metropolitan Areas: Salt Lake City, Utah Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area
This report presents statistics on housing and household characteristics for the Salt Lake City, Utah Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA), based on data collected from a sample of 5,000 housing units between April 1980 and March 1981. The document contains five parts: (1) statistics on general housing characteristics, with comparisons to 1970 and 1977 figures; (2) indicators of housing and neighborhood quality such as services available, structural deficiencies, and owner versus renter occupied; (3) financial characteristics (income, property value, and rent paid); (4) characteristics of recent mover households; and (5) financial characteristics cross-indexed by indicators of housing and neighborhood quality. All sections provide breakdowns on housing units with black householders and householders of Spanish origin. The October 1980 estimate of total housing units for the Salt Lake City SMSA is 260,000, a net gain of 40,700 units over the 1977 estimate. This reflects 31,700 units added through new construction, minus 4,300 units lost, plus 13,300 unspecified units that entered the inventory. Approximately 12 percent of the total housing stock in the SMSA was constructed since 1977, and most new construction occurred in the suburbs. Approximately 16 percent of all housing in the suburbs was built since 1977, compared to 3 percent in the city. The proportion of the housing inventory lost between 1977-80 was 3 percent for the central city and 2 percent for the suburbs. Definitions, the questionnaires, and maps are included.
Annual Housing Survey: 1980. Housing Characteristics for Selected Metropolitan Areas: Salt Lake City, Utah Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area
This report presents statistics on housing and household characteristics for the Salt Lake City, Utah Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA), based on data collected from a sample of 5,000 housing units between April 1980 and March 1981. The document contains five parts: (1) statistics on general housing characteristics, with comparisons to 1970 and 1977 figures; (2) indicators of housing and neighborhood quality such as services available, structural deficiencies, and owner versus renter occupied; (3) financial characteristics (income, property value, and rent paid); (4) characteristics of recent mover households; and (5) financial characteristics cross-indexed by indicators of housing and neighborhood quality. All sections provide breakdowns on housing units with black householders and householders of Spanish origin. The October 1980 estimate of total housing units for the Salt Lake City SMSA is 260,000, a net gain of 40,700 units over the 1977 estimate. This reflects 31,700 units added through new construction, minus 4,300 units lost, plus 13,300 unspecified units that entered the inventory. Approximately 12 percent of the total housing stock in the SMSA was constructed since 1977, and most new construction occurred in the suburbs. Approximately 16 percent of all housing in the suburbs was built since 1977, compared to 3 percent in the city. The proportion of the housing inventory lost between 1977-80 was 3 percent for the central city and 2 percent for the suburbs. Definitions, the questionnaires, and maps are included.
Annual Housing Survey: 1980. Housing Characteristics for Selected Metropolitan Areas: Salt Lake City, Utah Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area
1984
501 pages
Report
No indication
English