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Jul 25, 2024 ... Chris Redfearn and Anthony Orlando on why "pro-business" Texas housing markets are catching up to "pro-regulation" California. Talking Headways Podcast: Have Cities Run Out of Land? Chris Redfearn of USC and Anthony Orlando of Cal Poly Pomona on why "pro-business" Texas housing markets are catching up to "pro-regulation" California and what it might mean for future city growth. This week we’re joined by Chris Redfearn of USC and Anthony Orlando of Cal Poly Pomona to discuss their paper "Houston, you have a problem: How large cities accommodate more housing." We talk about why "pro-business" Texas housing markets are catching up to "pro-regulation" California and what it might mean for future city growth. Scroll down below the audio player for an edited excerpt of our conversation, or click here for an unedited, AI-generated transcript of the entire conversation. Jeff Wood: I want to kind of crystallize what you all are saying in the paper, which is basically, cities accommodate growth by building more housing units on the periphery, then when that land "runs out," eventually, the cheaper land is consumed and developers begin to focus on infill, which is what Anthony was talking about. And then the number of tracks participating in growth is reduced over time suggesting the ossification of neighborhoods. So those are the three things that I picked up from the paper is that, like, we grow until we can’t, we start to do infill — which is more expensive — and then neighborhoods are also ossifying at the same time. I want to talk about that kind of change from the growth on the outside to changing to infill and some of the kind of construction things. Because part of the paper that was really interesting to me as well is thinking about construction costs or land costs or the things that make it harder to build after you’ve run out of land on the periphery to what I would call sprawl.
Jan 23, 2017 ... NEIL REDFEARN achieved a lifelong dream by taking charge of his boyhood club ... moving house and had been given two hours to do it. Everything ... My year with Cellino: Neil Redfearn's story ARTICLES / COACHING/ LEEDS UNITED WRITTEN BY SIMON AUSTIN — JANUARY 23, 2017 NEIL REDFEARN achieved a lifelong ambition by taking charge of his boyhood club, Leeds United, in 2014. His single season in charge turned out to be highly memorable, though often for the wrong reasons. Here he reflects on life as manager under eccentric and unpredictable Italian owner Massimo Cellino. Neil Redfearn: "I grew up in Birkenshaw, between Leeds and Bradford. At that point Leeds were the side, in England and in Europe. They were a big influence on me. My dad (Brian) was a pro for 15 years. He played for Blackburn, Darlington, Bradford City, Bradford Park Avenue. From a young age I had a dad and a coach as well. I was fortunate to have my dad, because he always put that belief in me that I was good enough. And I always believed that myself. I instil that in other players as well, I make them feel they’re good enough. From seven or eight he used to take me to Leeds games. He was a Bradford fella but Don Revie had built this side that were the best in Europe. It was a great learning curve to watch these players, Clarke and Bremner and Hunter. We used to watch Leeds on Saturday and Bradford Northern, the rugby league side, on a Sunday. Just me and my Dad. He’d pick out certain pieces in the game and say, ‘when the ball goes into Eddie Gray, watch how he takes it.’ When you’re seven or eight you can’t really see the mechanics of what they’re trying to do, just the quality in what they do, the touch. My favourite was Allan Clarke because he scored goals.
, Land Leverage: Decomposing Home Price Dynamics; Real Estate Economics, 35 (2), 183-208; 2007. Giuliano, G., Redfearn, C., Agarwal, A., Li, C., & Zhaun, D. University of Southern California Ph.D. in Economics, University of California, Berkeley Christian L. Redfearn, Ph.D., is interested in research in applied microeconomics, applied econometric, urban and regional economics, real estate finance, and price index construction. He is currently involved in both domestic and international research projects, including Swedish housing markets, residential real estate markets in Singapore, and Los Angeles Basin Real Estate Submarket Dynamics. Professor Redfearn’s work has been published in the Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics, Journal of Urban Economics, and Real Estate Economics. Redfearn, C., with McMillen, D. (2013). Estimation and Hypothesis Testing for Nonparametric Hedonic House Price Functions. Journal of Regional Science, 50(3), 712-733. Redfearn, C., Giuliano, G., & Agarwal, A. (2012). Network Accessibility & The Evolution Of Urban Employment. Urban Studies, 49(1), 77-95. Redfearn, C. (2009). How Informative Are Average Effects? Hedonic Regression and Amenity Capitalization in Complex Urban Housing Markets. Regional Science& Urban Economics, 39(3). Advancing real estate knowledge, informing business practice, and addressing timely issues that affect the real estate industry, the urban economy, and public policy. METRANS Transportation Consortium METRANS Transportation Consortium is a joint partnership of USC and California State University, Long Beach. Its mission is to solve transportation problems in large metropolitan regions through interdisciplinary research, education, and outreach.
Oct 24, 2023 ... A tendency for land grant institutions is often to deliver ... WICS Conference 2023: Moving Beyond the Ordinary. Authors. Daren Redfearn ... [ADOBE OPT-IN] Invalid `previousPermissions`! DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Water and Integrated Cropping Systems WICS Conference 2023: Moving Beyond the Ordinary Daren Redfearn, University of Nebraska-LincolnFollow Daran Rudnick, University of Nebraska - LincolnFollow October 24th, 2023. 9:00 am - 6:00 pm The Graduate Hotel, 141 N. 9th St., Lincoln, NE The theme of this year’s WICS Conference is Moving Beyond the Ordinary with the goal of addressing Team Science. Our vision is to provide opportunities and connection points among IANR faculty to leverage their individual knowledge, skills, abilities, and passions. A tendency for land grant institutions is often to deliver information biased from a single, primary discipline and perspective. This is known as comfort zone mega bias and has been defined as “the tendency to drag a problem into our comfort zone and solve the problem that we know how to solve, rather than solving the problem that needs to be solved” (Spretzler et al., 2016). The aim of the WICS Hub is to overcome this tendency by leveraging synergies across disciplines and mission areas to solve many of the grand challenges we face. We hope that you can take advantage of the different disciplinary and mission area perspectives from today’s sessions. Our purpose is to support collaborative relationships and foster engagement to address complex issues that are important to Nebraskans by empowering communication among research, teaching, and extension experts in agricultural production and natural resource systems. Outcomes for the 2023 WICS Conference are three-fold:
Feb 8, 2024 ... ... land unbeknownst to the family. She's a war veteran with ... From the bestselling author of In an Instant comes the moving story ... Amazon Instagram X Facebook TikTok Goodreads Book Review: Where Butterflies Wander by Suzanne Redfearn Affiliate links can be found within this post. If you need additional information, please see the disclaimer. An ARC copy of this book was provided to me in exchange for my honest review. All thoughts are my own. ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Rating: 5 out of 5. I made the mistake of reading the last portions of this book at work and was bawling at my desk. Thankfully no one was around to see, but you’ve been warned. I’ve read just about every Suzanne has written and all of her books have a central theme about loss and how individuals and groups overcome their own grief. I always find myself putting my own life into the perspective of her books and asking myself how I would handle these various experiences. Never once judging the characters for their choices, but simply weighing how similar or different my own choices would be This is a story about loss. A family loses one of their young children to a terrible drowning accident in their backyard swimming pool. In an attempt to find a way forward, they return to the mother’s childhood family summer cabin and are faced with a whole new set of challenges. Focused on selling the cabin so they can buy a new house and move on from their loss, they can’t sell the cabin because a family friend is living in a second building on the land unbeknownst to the family. She’s a war veteran with horrible facial cars from combat with her own secrets, trying to live quietly on the land.