Toronto Star

Driverless cars bring visions of building boom, suburban sprawl

MIT study sees future where car ownership is obsolete

- PATRICK CLARK BLOOMBERG

NEW YORK— It’s 2027 (or 2037) and the age of the self-driving car. City dwellers have traded in their car keys for ride hails. Street parking has been replaced by wider sidewalks and bike lanes, while developers are busy converting garages into much-needed housing.

That’s one vision of how self-driving cars will affect U.S. real estate, laid out in a report by MIT’s Center for Real Estate. But it’s not the only one. Even as reclaimed parking spaces fuel a downtown building boom, autonomous vehicles will encourage builders to push deeper into the exurban fringe, confident that homebuyers will tolerate longer commutes now that they don’t have to drive, according to the report, sponsored by a unit of Capital One Financial Corp.

In the first scenario, cities become more like New York, with walkable streets and fleets of autonomous vehicles for public transit. In the second, they become more like Dallas or Phoenix, which already function as a collection of suburbs.

“It’s a polarizati­on,” said Albert Saiz, a co-author of the paper, which also covers the future of retail space and strategies for producing moreafford­able housing. “I see both things happening at once.” Long road It’s far from clear how long it will be before fully autonomous vehicles are ready to rule the road, or how government­s will choose to regulate them. The 25 biggest U.S. cities generated a combined $5 billion (U.S.) last year from parking tickets, vehicle registrati­ons, and other related revenue, according to data compiled by Governing magazine. Government­s will also have to grapple with the likelihood that as the cost of the vehicles comes down, fleet companies may overburden roads with them.

In New York, it won’t be until 2040 that “land use planning is permanentl­y altered” to accommodat­e self-driving cars, according to a study this month by the Regional Plan Associatio­n, an urban research and advocacy group for the metropolit­an area. Still, Saiz is optimistic that selfdrivin­g cars will unlock buildable space.

Developers are already starting to target parking structures, gas stations and auto dealership­s, betting that they’ll be able to redevelop the sites as car ownership becomes obsolete, said Rick Palacios, director of research at John Burns Real Estate Consulting. Palacios also sees the vehicles driving suburban sprawl, though, in his view, builders will start by redevelopi­ng downtown sites, then move to the suburbs after they’re done with the parking garages and other legacy sites.

Slower home sales In other potential effects on the real estate market, driverless cars would help seniors stay independen­t longer, slowing home sales but also reducing the demand for assisted-living facilities, Palacios wrote in a September research brief. The remodellin­g industry may get a boost as older homeowners invest in makeovers to help them age in place. Constructi­on costs will decline when driverless trucks are used to transport materials, he said.

If it’s hard to predict how or when these changes will take hold, it’s also hard to know how they’ll affect property values. The developabl­e land is likely to temporaril­y slow price appreciati­on in cities, Palacios said, adding that values will probably rise once the new parcels are used up.

In already popular urban areas, driverless cars could spur more gentrifica­tion and increase property values further, Saiz said in a follow-up email. On the other hand, the vehicles could drive real estate values down by creating new supply in the suburbs.

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