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This study helps to substantiate why seniors housing and care should be recognized as a separate, major real estate category, along with office, industrial, retail, multifamily and lodging properties. Measures key attributes of the seniors housing industry, such as number of properties, units, value of new construction, revenues, margins, profits and investment returns, and compares them to the multifamily and lodging industries. Conducted by NIC and PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP; 1999; 48 pages. The updated 2004 Data includes an addendum that updates the key statistics found in the 1999 publication A study supported by NIC's mini-grant research program, and conducted by Professor Emil Malizia of the University of North Carolina, Department of Planning and Institute for Economic Development. The report includes recommendations for developers and financiers on strategy and tactics to win zoning entitlements in the face of the most significant types of local opposition that seniors housing developers have encountered, and provides detail on findings about the physical, fiscal (tax, revenues and costs of municipal services) and economic (construction and on-going employment, and local purchases) impacts specific to seniors housing and care property types. This information can also be of use in making presentations to planning and zoning boards. Produced by NIC; 2001; 60 pages.
Price: $75.00 |



