
Volume
28,
Number 2, 2006 of the Journal of Real Estate Research
Disaggregating
Neighborhood and Community Center Property Types
William G. Hardin III
Department of Finance and Economics
Mississippi State University
P. O. Box 9580
Mississippi State, MS 39762-958
Email: bhardin@cobilan.msstate.edu |
Jon Carr
Department of Marketing and Management
College of Business Administration
University of Southern Mississippi
P. O. Box 5091
Hattiesburg, MS 39406-5091 |
Abstract: Existing retail theory postulates a hierarchical space
market with larger centers having greater drawing capacity and greater
agglomeration benefits. In this study, rent determinants for two tiers
of the proscribed hierarchical model are compared and the existence of
retail center property type differences in rent determinants is
evaluated. Property-specific data, competing center data and trade area
data for 370 neighborhood and community centers derived from a census of
retail centers for a single large MSA are used. Results indicate that
community and neighborhood centers can be differentiated into distinct
retail property types. The results also show that the presence of lower
income households in a center’s primary trade area has a pronounced
negative impact on community center rents.

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