ArticlePDF Available

Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units

Authors:
  • Independent Researcher

Abstract and Figures

Accessory dwelling units (ADUs) are promoted by some municipalities for social and environmental reasons. However, appraisals of and lending on properties featuring ADUs can be complicated by inaccurate perceptions of these dwellings and certain institutional policies. This article provides a primer on ADUs and tests an income-based approach to valuation. For 14 properties with ADUs in Portland, Oregon, an income capitalization approach yielded valuations significantly higher than actual sale prices, by 7.2% or 9.8% on average, depending on the formula used. ADUs also contributed on average 25% or 34% of each property's appraised value, depending on the formula used. Valuation by income can Increase appraiser insight as ADUs become common.
Content may be subject to copyright.
Understanding and
Appraising Properties with
Accessory Dwelling Units
by Martin John Brown and Taylor Watkins
Few forms of housing have caused as much excitement among planners
and social advocates, and as much consternation among appraisers and other
real estate professionals, as accessory dwelling units
also known as granny
flats, backyard cottages, carriage houses, and numerous other labels.
Since 2000, dozens of municipalities have altered policies to encourage accessory
dwelling units (ADUs), including Santa Cruz, California; Seattle, Washington;
Arlington, Virginia; and Denver, Colorado.1 Nonetheless, permitted ADUs are still
rare. Portland, Oregon, is widely considered to be a leader in the ADU movement;
however, a recent search there showed only 431 permitted ADUs out of over 148,000
properties where zoning would allow them2
a market penetration of about 0.3%.
Perhaps as a consequence of this rarity, there frequently are misunderstandings
among appraisers, owners, brokers, and lending agents of this type of
microdevelopment
as well as some spectacular variations in appraised values
on the same property. Also, there appear to be variations among key national
institutions in language and policies relating to ADUs. Real estate professionals at
every level lack a consistent view of functional and monetary value of properties
with ADUs. This article addresses the situation by
1. providing a primer on the defining qualities of ADUs;
2. describing current difficulties in appraising properties featuring ADUs in
the United States;
3. proposing and testing two income-based formulas for valuing such properties,
and reporting valuations for 14 properties with ADUs in Portland, Oregon; and
4. using elementary statistics to test several simple questions about the rela-
tionship of these valuations to actual sale prices.
A Primer on ADUs and Their Valuation
Definitions and Synonyms
The basic functional definition of accessory dwelling unit is similar among
1. Wendy Koch, “A House Divided Helps Pay the Bills,” USAToday.com, August 17, 2011, http://www.usatoday
.com/MONEY/usaedition/2011-08-18-housesplitting10-CV- - - - - - - - With-_CV_U.htm.
2. Bill Cunningham, City of Portland Bureau of Planning and Sustainability, phone interview, August 30, 2011.
Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 297
ABSTRACT
Accessory dwell-
ing units (ADUs) are
promoted by some
municipalities for social
and environmental
reasons. However,
appraisals of and
lending on properties
featuring ADUs can be
complicated by inac-
curate perceptions of
these dwellings and
certain institutional
policies. This article
provides a primer on
ADUs and tests an
income-based approach
to valuation. For 14
properties with ADUs
in Portland, Oregon,
an income capitaliza-
tion approach yielded
valuations signicantly
higher than actual
sale prices, by 7.2%
or 9.8% on average,
depending on the for-
mula used. ADUs also
contributed on average
25% or 34% of each
property’s appraised
value, depending on the
formula used. Valuation
by income can increase
appraiser insight as
ADUs become common.
planners, social advocates, and government agencies.
According to sources as diverse as Medicare,3 the City of
Santa Cruz,4 and the American Planning Association,5
an ADU is a small self-contained dwelling, typically
with its own entrance, cooking, and bathing facilities,
that shares the site of a larger, single-unit dwelling.
ADUs may be attached, as in the case of a basement
apartment, or detached, as in the case of a backyard
cottage. An ADU is not a separate property; it has the
same owner as the primary dwelling.
Beyond this consensus, a plethora of synonyms and
related words sow confusion. For example, the following
terms have all been used as synonyms for ADU:
•accessoryapartment,accessoryunit,ancillaryunit
•backyardcottage
•carriagehouse
•casita
3. US Department of Health and Human Services, “Types of Long-Term Care—Summary of Long-Term Care Choices,” http://www.medicare.gov/LongTermCare
/Static/AccessoryDwelling.asp?dest=NAV%7CTypes%7CTypes%7CAccesoryDwelling.
4. City of Santa Cruz, “Accessory Dwelling Unit Development Program,” http://www.cityofsantacruz.com/index.aspx?page=1150.
5. American Planning Association, Using Smart Growth and Universal Design to Link the Needs of Children and the Aging Population (Family-Friendly
Communities Brieng Papers 02, 2011), http://www.planning.org/research/family/briengpapers/multigenerational.htm?print=true.
Figure 1 Example of Accessory Dwelling Unit
Danielle Johnson, Addo Real Estate, Seattle
The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units
298
Some agencies make
distinctions among these
terms, and those distinctions
can affect lending and
valuation.
•gardensuite
•grannycottage,grannyat,grannyunit
•in-law,in-lawunit,mother-in-lawat
•lanewayhouse
•secondunit,secondaryunit,secondarydwelling
unit, SDU
•sidekick
However, some influential agencies make distinc-
tions among these terms, and those distinctions can
affect lending and valuation, as will be noted later.
Properties with permitted ADUs are similar to
duplexes in that there are two independent dwellings
on a property with single ownership, but they can differ
from duplexes in terms of design and legal treatment.
For example, a duplex typically offers two roughly
equivalent dwellings within a single building envelope,
whereas an ADU is usually significantly smaller and less
prominent architecturally than the primary dwelling
a
convention that may be enforced by local regulation.
Also, properties with ADUs, unlike duplexes, are
generally located in single-unit residential zones and
may have requirements for owner occupancy. In many
jurisdictions that allow ADUs, owner occupancy is
required in one unit,6 while the other may be legitimately
rented out. In other jurisdictions, such as Portland, both
units may be rented.7 An example of a detached ADU is
shown in Figure 1.
The Promise and Quandary of ADUs
To planners and certain property owners, ADUs offer a
way of addressing civic, environmental, and personal
needs in a time of demographic change. ADUs are
infill development; they promise to increase density
without changing neighborhood character. Increased
density is arguably connected to higher transit use and
lower energy use.8 Also, given increasing evidence
that sheer size is the greatest contributor to the envi-
ronmental impact of new housing,9 ADUs, which are
typically less than 800 square feet, are likely to have
small environmental footprints even when built with
no extraordinary green features.
ADUs also respond to demographic trends. The
average American is getting older; the US Census
Bureau projects that persons aged 65 and older will
increase from 13% of the population in 2010 to 20%
by 2050, or from 40 million to 88 million people.10
The average American is likely to live in a smaller
household; from 1940 to 2010, average household size
declined from 3.7 to 2.6 people.11 Overwhelmingly,
Americans want to age in place, maintaining their
homes and social connections as they grow older,
according to AARP (formerly American Association
of Retired Persons). But that ambition is challenged by
unsuitable architectural designs, the need for aid with
everyday tasks, and limited incomes in retirement.12
An ADU could be a significant resource for
such a homeowner, providing her with a new,
smaller, and more appropriately designed dwelling.
ADUs also encourage informal caregiving and
companionship,13 since in practice many are rented
to friends and relatives.
The potential to create legitimate income from
rent is a crucial, and nearly defining, part of the ADU
concept. One coalition of agencies in Washington
State argues that developing an ADU could help
homeowners “possibly qualify for a larger home loan,
have extra income, or more choice in using [their]
home.14 Medicare characterizes in-law apartments
as a type of long-term care, citing income as one of
the benefits.15
Despite this professional hard sell, the creation
of permitted ADUs has been very limited, as the
0.3% statistic cited earlier for Portland, Oregon,
6. For example, Seattle Department of Planning and Development, “Establishing a Backyard Cottage (Detached Accessory Dwelling Unit),” May 12, 2011,
http://www.seattle.gov/dpd/publications/cam/cam116b.pdf.
7. City of Portland, Bureau of Development Services, “Notice of a Type II Decision on a Proposal in Your Neighborhood; Case File Number LU 08-156155
AD,” October 14, 2008, http://www.portlandonline.com/bds/index.cfm?a=214639&c=49783.
8. David Brownstone and Thomas F. Golob, “The Impact of Residential Density on Vehicle Usage and Energy Consumption,” Journal of Urban Economics
65, no. 1 (January 2009): 91–98.
9. Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, A Life Cycle Approach to Prioritizing Methods of Preventing Waste from the Residential Construction Sector
in the State of Oregon, Phase 2 Report, version 1.4 (September 29, 2010), http://www.deq.state.or.us/lq/pubs/docs/sw/ResidentialBldgLCA.pdf.
10. US Census Bureau, “National Population Projections: Summary Tables” (Released 2008, based on Census 2000), http://www.census.gov/population
/www/projections/summarytables.html.
11. US Census Bureau, Table HH-6, “Average Population per Household and Family: 1940 to Present,” http://www.census.gov/population/socdemo
/hh-fam/hh6.xls.
12. AARP Public Policy Institute, Beyond 50.05: A Report to the Nation on Livable Communities: Creating Environments for Successful Aging (2005), 48–50.
13. American Planning Association, Using Smart Growth and Universal Design.
14. ARCH, “Accessory Dwelling Unit,” http://www.archhousing.org/current-residents/accessory-dwelling-unit.html.
15. US Department of Health and Human Services, “Types of Long-Term Care,” http://www.medicare.gov/longtermcare/static/AccessoryDwelling.asp.
Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 299
illustrates. The limited development of ADUs
has been attributed to various factors, including
restrictive local limits for size and density,16 parking
requirements, and owner-occupancy requirements.17
There is local opposition to ADUs in some places;
occasional news reports describe property owners’
fears of crowding or loss of a single-family feel.18
Another possible explanation for the paucity of
permitted ADUs is that property owners are simply not
as interested in them as planners and social advocates.
However, a real grassroots interest is demonstrated by
the tens (or perhaps hundreds) of thousands of illegal
ADUs nationwide. In some densely occupied East and
West Coast communities, illegal ADUs might compose
2%
-
10% of housing stock.19 One San Francisco study
estimated more than 20% of residential buildings
contained an illegal secondary unit.20
In short, there is consumer interest in ADUs.
Large numbers of property owners are creating them,
but most are not using official channels of permitting
and financing. Unpermitted ADUs are often the only
kind of ADUs local brokers and lending agents know
about
so much so that real estate listings downplay
the rentability of units that are in fact fully permitted.
Perceptions and Theories of ADU Value
How have properties with ADUs been valued by
buyers and appraisers? Searches of The Appraisal
Journal and other peer-reviewed literature revealed
almost no formal writing on this topic. While fears
of declining property value can be part of opposition
to ADU developments,21 very little relevant evidence
can be found in the literature. One statistical exami-
nation of low-density Philadelphia neighborhoods
associates in-law suites with a 5% decline in property
value.22 Meanwhile, other research suggests some
people will pay a premium of about 15% to live in
a New Urbanist community, with features such as
ADUs, over a suburban subdivision.23
On the level of everyday practice, conversations
with appraisers suggest they appraise properties with
ADUs much as they do single-unit residences, using
the sales comparison approach to value, and they are
struggling against the limitations of this method. The
sales comparison approach requires multiple recent
sales of very similar properties. However, this kind of
data is difficult to find, given the rarity of permitted
ADUs and the slow, declining market of 2009
2012.
With fewer sales, the sales comparison approach
is less reliable. The cost approach to value, which
might be a useful alternative, can be problematic
in a declining market, due to fluctuations in land
values and the costs of construction. The result is
a high degree of variation and perhaps subjectivity.
For example, one permitted ADU in Portland had
estimates of contributory value that ranged from
$10,000 to $100,000.
Meanwhile, income-based valuations are a
cornerstone of commercial and investment real estate,
even for smaller properties such as duplexes. “Any
property that generates income can be valued using the
income capitalization approach,” notes The Appraisal
of Real Estate.24 Using this approach, “an appraiser
derives a value indication for an income-producing
property by converting its anticipated benefits [i.e.,
cash flows] into property value.25 Income-based
valuations rely on the relationship of market rents
to sale prices, data which can be relatively abundant
and tractable since there is less need to find exacting
sales comparables.
The income capitalization approach also differs in
philosophy in a way that could make it more stable.
A recent piece in The Appraisal Journal by Fanning,
Blazejack, and Mann describes the differences between
16. Elinor Hope Stege, “What Next for Accessory Dwellings? Getting from Bylaws to Buildings” (thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2009), http://
dspace.mit.edu/handle/1721.1/50124.
17. Nathaniel Taylor Hickey, Urban Consolidation: An Analysis of Accessory Dwelling Units and Backyard Cottages in Seattle (University of Washington, 2010),
57–61.
18. For example, David Schultz, “Board to Consider Housing Law Change,Arlington Connection, July 16, 2008, http://www.connectionnewspapers.com
t/article.asp?article=317393&paper=60&cat=104.
19. Jake Wegmann and Alison Nemirow, “Secondary Units and Urban Inll: A Literature Review” (working paper, Berkeley Institute of Urban and Regional
Development, University of California, February 2011), Table 1.
20. San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association, Secondary Units: A Painless Way to Increase the Supply of Housing, Report 398 (August 2001),
http://www.spur.org/documents/secondaryunits.pdf.
21. For example, Petition Online, “No to Accessory Dwellings in Arlington, Virginia Petition,” May 7, 2010, http://www.petitiononline.com/pupi1031/petition.html.
22. G. Stacy Sirmans and David A. Macpherson, The Value of Housing Characteristics (National Association of Realtors, National Center for Real Estate
Research, December 2003).
23. Robert E. Lang, “Valuing the Suburbs: Why Some ‘Improvements’ Lower Home Prices,Opolis 1, no. 1 (Winter 2005): 5–12.
24. Appraisal Institute, The Appraisal of Real Estate, 13th ed. (Chicago: Appraisal Institute, 2008), 447.
25. Appraisal Institute, The Dictionary of Real Estate Appraisal, 5th ed. (Chicago: Appraisal Institute, 2010), 99.
The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units
300
26. Stephen F. Fanning, John A. Blazejack, and George R. Mann, “Price versus Fundamentals—From Bubbles to Distressed Markets,The Appraisal Journal
79, no. 2 (Spring 2011): 143–154.
27. “S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Indices,”http://www.standardandpoors.com/indices/sp-case-shiller-home-price-indices/en
/us/?indexId=spusa-cashpidff- - p-us- - - - .
transaction and fundamental analyses.26 The sales
comparison approach is based on recent transactions,
and reflects what buyers have been paying to hold
title to housing
including any speculative opinion
they have about future value, and the influence of
ephemera like interest rates. The sales comparison
approach will echo bubble and distressed markets.
Meanwhile, the income capitalization approach is
reliant on demonstrable rent, which is what people
will pay to use housing; it reflects current productivity.
Some indicators from Portland, Oregon, suggest
the income capitalization approach might provide
insight in a well-known market. Figure 2 compares
rents in Portland to the Case-Shiller Home Price Index,27
from 2007 to early 2011. There is no historical data
source for single-unit house rents, so to approximate
their trend apartment rents are used, as described in
more detail later. In this graphic, rents clearly offer a
contrasting basis for value: they slowly climb while the
home price index declines. Perhaps more interesting,
rents were less variable than home prices, staying
within 14% of their spring 2011 values, while the Case-
Shiller Index ranged to ±40%.
Figure 2 Comparison of Case-Shiller Home Price Index to Apartment Rents in Portland, Oregon
2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
80%
90%
100%
110%
120%
130%
140%
Case-Shiller Index
Rents
Percent of Spring 2011 Value
Year
*
*
**
*
*
X
**
Case-Shiller Home Price Index
1 bedroom, 1 bath units
2 bedroom, 1 bath units
2 bedroom, 2 bath units
3 bedroom, 1 bath units
3 bedroom, 2 bath units
*
Note: A regression line (r2 = 0.33, slope = 2.44% per year) is drawn through the combined rent data.
Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 301
28. Fannie Mae, Selling Guide: Fannie Mae Single Family (January 27, 2011), 502 and 531, https://www.efanniemae.com/sf/guides/ssg/sg/pdf/sel012711.pdf.
29. Freddie Mac, Single-Family Seller/Ser vicer Guide, Section 44.15.
30. US Dept. of Housing and Urban Development, “Frequently Asked Questions: Valuation Protocol—Accessory Dwelling Units,” 16, http://portal.hud.gov
/hudportal/documents/huddoc?id=aprval.pdf.
31. Freddie Mac, Single-Family Seller/Ser vicer Guide, Section 44.15.
While the income capitalization approach and
other more fundamental analyses may fit within
appraisal industry best practices, there remain
institutional barriers to their use on properties featuring
ADUs. The majority of US mortgages are for single-
unit properties and are originated by banks whose
intent is to quickly resell the loans to government-
sponsored enterprises (GSEs) such as Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac. Often these loans are supported by
agencies such as the US Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD), which administers the
FHA mortgage insurance program. These institutions
have their own vocabulary for ADUs and standards
for properties, which the mortgage originator must
respect for the loan to be marketable
and which
affect appraisals.
Fannie Mae does not use the term accessory
dwelling unit in its single-family Selling Guide, but will
purchase loans on properties with illegal “accessory
units,” a scenario for which it provides detailed
guidance. It will also purchase loans on properties
with legal accessory units, “if the value of the legal
second unit is relatively insignificant in relation to the
total value of the property.28 Freddie Mac says that “a
property may have an incidental accessory unit that is
incidental to the overall value and appearance of the
subject property.29 The US Department of Housing and
Urban Development uses the term accessory dwelling
unit and emphasizes the subordinate nature of ADUs;
if the ADU is too similar in size, it is a secondary unit,
requiring a different appraisal form30 and likely a
different lending program.
Taken together, these guidelines create a strong
suggestion for loan originators and the appraisers that
work with them: if an ADU is encountered, it is likely
to be illegal, and it may (and perhaps should) be given
only insignificant or incidental contributory value.
The case of a legal ADU, where an owner can receive
market rent and contributory value might be estimated
with the income capitalization approach, is barely
addressed. Freddie Mac states, “appraisals that rely
primarily on the income or cost approaches to value
in order to estimate market value are unacceptable.31
This state of affairs may flow from a mismatch
between the setting and legal use of properties with
ADUs. A property with a legal ADU offers a seeming
contradiction: a two-unit, income-producing property
in single-unit zoning. Though the use is permitted
by local government, it may appear to be an illegal
use because of the zoning. The loan originators and
appraisers then struggle with topics such as HUD’s
distinction between a “secondary unit” and an ADU,
and whether the income from rent can be included
in qualifying the borrower for lending. As a result of
these dynamics, appraisers and originators are likely
to be extremely conservative with contributory values
for legal ADUs, to the point where the accuracy of
valuations may be compromised.
Testing an Income Capitalization
Approach to Value in Portland, Oregon
What are the true values of legal ADUs? Is it realistic
to presume, as GSE guidelines seem to suggest, that
ADUs contribute only incidental or insignificant
amounts to the worth of the properties they sit on?
To test whether an income approach to value would
provide insight into questions like these, an income-
based method of valuation was developed and applied
that suited the reality of properties with legal ADUs
in Portland, Oregon. Portland is a favorable environ-
ment for such a study, because it has a relatively high
number of permitted ADUs, and allows both primary
and accessory units to be rented.
First, properties with ADUs that had sold were
identified and income-based valuations were applied
to them. Then, those results were compared to actual
sale prices. In particular, the research focused on
questions that might reveal the way such properties
are perceived by the market:
•Whatarethetypicalcharacteristicsofsoldprop-
erties featuring permitted ADUs in terms of size,
ADU type, owner occupancy, and sale price?
•Howmuchappraisedvalue(viatheincomecapi-
talization approach) do ADUs contribute to their
properties?
•Isappraisedvalueviaincomegreaterthan,simi-
lar to, or less than, actual sale prices?
•Doesappraisedvaluetend to be more variable,
equally variable, or less variable than sale price?
The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units
302
32. RMLS.com (Regional Multiple Listing Service) database,” http://www.rmls.com/RC2/UI/Home.asp.
33. City of Portland, “PortlandMaps,” http://portlandmaps.com/.
There are many ways an income-based valuation
might be calculated. To develop a method that could
address the research questions, while also being
usable for a practicing appraiser, the following
guidelines were used:
•The method should not rely on the existence
of comparable sales of properties with ADUs.
Currently, such properties are too rare to provide
a useful body of comparable sales.
•Thecalculationofappraisedvalueforaproperty
with an ADU cannot depend on knowing an actual
sale price for that property. For researchers work-
ing after the fact, actual sale prices are available;
however, practicing appraisers may not know an
actual sale price for any number of reasons.
•Aresidentialappraisershouldbeabletoapplythe
method using only standard sources of data, in a
reasonable amount of time. Besides actual sale
prices, there are other details that are available
to researchers that could influence perceptions
of value. The aim is to base valuation only on
the kinds of information readily available to the
appraiser, for example, public facts about the
property (square footage, etc.) and facts about the
market (rents in similar types of housing, etc).
Selecting Study Properties
To create a set of properties for study, the Regional
Multiple Listing Service (RMLS)32 listings were
researched for properties that sold between late 2006
and summer 2011, and contained comments indicat-
ing the likely presence of an accessory dwelling unit,
such as “accessory dwelling,” “granny flat,” etc. About
50 candidate properties were identified. Next, permit,
ownership, and assessor records were checked for
these properties using a city web page33 and email
consultations with city staff. Properties classified sim-
ply as duplexes, properties without an ADU permit or
equivalent grandfathered status, and luxury properties
with sale prices over $750,000 were then eliminated. If
the property was owner-occupied (determined by com-
paring the owner’s address to the property address),
this was recorded, but owner-occupancy was not a
factor in valuation.
After this winnowing process, 14 properties
remained, ranging in sale date from December 2006
to June 2011. They offered a sample of low- and mid-
level Portland properties featuring ADUs sold in a
variety of market conditions. Five properties sold
in 2006 and 2007, when the Portland market was
peaking, according to the local Case-Shiller Index
(see Figure 2), and 9 properties sold in the slower,
declining and leveling markets of 2008
2011.
Developing an Income Capitalization Approach
for Properties Featuring ADUs
As a starting point, the approach to valuing proper-
ties with ADUs was a simple income method for
appraising a duplex. Like a house featuring an ADU,
a duplex contains two units, each of which can be
associated with a market rent, and the combined rent
can be translated into appraised value as
VI = GRM(I1 + I2) (1)
where VI is appraised value via the income approach;
I1 and I2 are demonstrable estimated monthly incomes
(rents) for the two units; andGRM is the monthly gross
rent multiplier, the ratio of sale prices to monthly rent for
neighborhood properties of similar type and quality, or
GRM =
sale price for neighborhood property
of similar type and quality
demonstrable market rent
for that property
(2)
In practice, the appraiser calculates the gross rent
multipler individually for each of a small sample of
relevant neighborhood properties, then summarizes
that sample in a single weighted average GRM the
appraiser thinks is most relevant to the subject
property. The appraiser conducts a similar rent survey
to develop I1 and I2 for the subject property.
In the case of a property featuring an ADU, the
two units might not be similar in function or quality.
Accordingly, the duplex formula was expanded
so that gross rent multipliers could be calculated
independently for the primary and accessory units:
VI = GRMpIp + GRMaduIadu (3)
where GRMp and GRMadu are gross rent multipliers
for the primary and accessory units, and Ip and Iadu
are their market rents.
For each of the 14 study properties, Ip and
Iadu were determined by studying a minimum of
Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 303
34. RMLS.com database.
35. “PortlandMaps.”
36. Hickey, Urban Consolidation, 70.
6 comparable properties, 3 for the primary dwelling
and 3 for the ADU. Rents came from the proprietary
database of the Rental Data Bureau, rdbOregon.
com. The gross rent multipliers were determined
by comparing those rents to sale prices recorded by
a regional listing service34 and the local assessor.35
Ideally, the rents and gross rent multipliers in such
an analysis would come from properties with ADUs.
However, this data was not available due to the scarcity
of permitted ADUs, so the most relevant information
available was used: rents and gross rent multipliers
from single-unit properties. Twelve of the 14 ADUs
in the study were detached dwellings, so single-unit
properties were most similar in architectural form
for the great majority of both primary dwellings and
ADUs. For the two remaining properties involving
attached ADUs, single-unit properties also were used
as comparables for the primary and accessory units.
While it was originally assumed that duplexes would
be a superior source of rent information for attached
ADUs, a comparison of duplexes and single-unit
properties showed very similar rents and gross rent
multipliers. After this discovery, the more abundant
data source for single-unit properties was chosen.
After developing Ip, Iadu, GRMp, and GRMadu using
the current (summer 2011) rents from rdbOregon.
com, those rents were corrected to reflect the times
that the properties had actually sold. Unfortunately,
no historical rent data was available for single-unit
properties. The correction was based on a trend derived
from the results of twice-yearly rent surveys conducted
by a local association of apartment landlords, the
Metro Multifamily Housing Association (MMHA).
This data and trend appear in Figure 2. The rents are
expressed as percentages of spring 2011 values. A
linear regression line (SPSS version 11) was drawn
through all the plotted points. From spring 2007 to
spring 2011, the trend was equivalent to a 2.44% per
year increase in rent. After correcting rents using this
factor, the tentative valuation formula was
VI = GRMpIp(da) + GRMaduIadu(da) (4)
where Ip(da) and Iadu(da) are the date-adjusted rents for
the primary and accessory units.
Equation (4) calculates appraised value as the
simple addition of appraised values for two distinct
single-unit properties. However, at a property with
an ADU, both dwellings share a single property.
Some correction factor(s) should be added to account
for this proximity and land sharing.
One approach is to simply remove the portion
of GRMadu that represents land. The land discount
formula is as follows:
VI = GRMpIp(da) + (1 - L) GRMaduIadu(da) (5)
Here, L is the land-to-value ratio, or the portion of
value of local properties that is typically represented
by land and not improvements. L is determined using
the same comparable properties used to define GRMp.
For each of those properties, at least two relevant
bare-land sales were located. Then, the bare-land
prices were divided by the comparable’s sale price
and averaged across all comparables to create a single
typical L for the study properties (0.35).
Equation (5) is called the land discount formula
because it accounts for an apparent duplication of
land values. It does so by mixing market land-price
data into a valuation formula based on income.
However, an advocate of fundamental, income-
based valuation might say that quantity of land is
irrelevant; all that matters is how proximity and land
sharing between primary and accessory units affects
rents. Effects could be positive or negative. Perhaps
renters find that a decrease in privacy demands a
lower rent, or perhaps renters find the presence of a
nearby occupant, who perhaps maintains a common
garden, makes a higher rent acceptable. Nearly all
such effects are speculation, because permitted
ADUs are too rare for data to be available.
Only one effect of proximity and land sharing is
currently supported by research. This is the tendency
of tenants on ADU properties to pay less than market
rent, probably because they tend to be friends,
relatives, or helpers of the owner. Hickey reports on
this phenomenon and estimates the rent discount
averages 20%.36 If renters occupy only the accessory
unit, this discount should only be applied to that unit.
However, it is not uncommon for owners to occupy
the accessory unit and rent out the primary one,
so the following rent discount formula anticipates
both possibilities:
The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units
304
VI = GRMpIp(pa) + GRMaduIadu(pa) (6)
Here, Ip(pa) and Iadu(pa) are the proximity-adjusted
rents, calculated as FpIp(da) and FaduIadu(da), respectively.
Fp and Fadu are the rent factors for the primary and
accessory dwellings, meaning the proportions of
market rent likely to be paid by tenants. Following
Hickey literally would call for setting Fp to 1.0 and Fadu
to 0.8. However, we cannot assume to know which
unit an owner occupies, or if an owner is there at all,
so the rent discount is split between the two units,
setting Fp and Fadu at 0.9.
It is suggested that the land discount formula
(Equation 5) and the rent discount formula
(Equation 6) are each practical methods of appraising
properties with ADUs. Note that these formulae are
alternative methods of correcting for the issue of
proximity of dwellings; both corrections should not
be applied simultaneously.
Results
Characteristics of Study Properties
Table 1 provides a summary of the properties studied
and the key results. The 14 properties had an average
sale price of $397,557. Nearly all accessory units (86%)
were detached units, such as backyard cottages and
converted garages. The accessory units were usually
small
the median was 487 finished square feet, 75%
were 758 square feet or smaller, and the maximum was
1176 square feet. Meanwhile the primary units ranged
in size from 912 to 2111 square feet, with a median
size of 1536 square feet. GRMs ranged from 147.9 to
268.3 for the primary units, and from 87.8 to 324.5 for
the ADUs. For 79% of properties, the owner occupied
at least one unit.
Appraised Values vs. Actual Sale Prices
Appraised values using the income capitalization
approach were typically higher than sale prices, as
illustrated in Figure 3. Using the rent discount for-
mula, appraised values exceeded actual sale prices
significantly, by an average of $29,067 (p = 0.03, paired
samples t -test, SPSS version 11) or 9.8% (p = 0.02).
Using the land discount formula, appraised values
via income exceeded sale prices significantly, by
an average of $21,121 (p = 0.07) or 7.2% (p = 0.05).
Appraised values were only slightly less variable
than sale prices: using the rent discount formula,
the standard deviations were roughly $88,939 and
$97,630 respectively. This difference in variability was
not significant statistically (p > 0.5, Levene’s test for
equality of variances, SPSS version 11).
One benefit of the income capitalization approach
is it clearly assigns contributory values to each unit. By
either formula, ADUs provided a substantial proportion
of appraised value. In the land discount scenario,
contributory values for ADUs ranged from $67,460 to
$152,157, or 17% to 38% of total appraised value. The
average contributory value was $99,076 or 25%. In the
rent discount scenario, contributory values for ADUs
ranged from $93,406 to $210,679, or 23% to 48% of the
total property value. The mean contributory value was
$137,183 or 34%. While both the land discount and rent
discount formulas give similar total appraised values,
the land discount formula assigns more of that value
to the primary unit.
Discussion
These results provide at least one clear suggestion:
though legal ADUs are currently rare, they can repre-
sent a significant portion of a property’s value. While
the guidelines of government-sponsored enterprises
might make it simpler to presume that a legal ADU’s
contributory value is incidental or insignificant, that
is not likely to be an accurate assumption. Whether
one’s interest is practical or theoretical, appraisers
and players in the market should be more thoughtful
and systematic about ADUs.
Practical Implications for Appraisers
When appraisers encounter a residence with an ADU,
they should immediately consider the highest and best
use of the property, and the format or institutional
form their reporting will use.
In residential settings, the critical part of the highest
and best use analysis may be researching the ADU’s
legal status
is it in fact fully permitted and legally
rentable? If not, applying an income capitalization
approach to value could be misleading. Since ADUs
are widely misunderstood by owners and real estate
brokers, it may be worthwhile to confirm the permit
status with local planning and/or zoning departments.
Real estate listings may downplay the value of ADUs,
even when the units are in fact fully permitted.
If the ADU is permitted, the appraisal assignment
could require more analysis than a typical single-unit
property. The appraiser may need to discuss and revise
the scope of work with the client. Applying the income
approach to a residence with an ADU creates a scope
of work that is similar to the appraisal of a duplex.
Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 305
Table 1 Statistical Summary of Properties
Mean Std. Dev. Minimum Median Maximum
Property Characteristics
Square footage of primary unit (nished sf) 1,552 424 912 1,536 2,111
Square footage of accessory unit (nished sf) 608 230 420 487 1,176
Sale date 2/16/2009 n/a 12/7/2006 12/13/2008 6/3/2011
Sale price ($) 379,557 99,489 198,000 384,950 506,500
Land Discount Formula
Monthly GRM for primary unit 197.9 35.7 147.9 194.6 268.3
Monthly GRM for ADU (incorporates land discount) 126.5 34.8 87.8 114.5 210.9
Corrected rent for primary dwelling ($) 1,520 321 1,005 1,568 1,971
Corrected rent for ADU ($) 802 129 556 847 1,000
Contributory value of primary (based on income) ($) 301,601 81,827 159,427 318,486 417,629
Contributory value of ADU (based on income) ($) 99,076 21,833 67,460 94,605 152,157
Property value by income (VI) ($) 400,678 91,839 256,778 433,730 503,485
Difference between valuation and actual ($) 21,121 40,982 (32,056) 16,024 116,733
Difference between valuation and sale price (%) 7.2 12.5 -6.7 6.0 33.4
Rent Discount Formula
Monthly GRM for primary unit 197.9 35.7 147.9 194.6 268.3
Monthly GRM for ADU 194.6 53.5 135.0 176.1 324.5
Corrected rent for primary dwelling ($) 1,368 289 904 1,412 1,773
Corrected rent for ADU ($) 722 116 501 762 900
Contributory value of primary (based on income) ($) 271,441 73,645 143,485 286,637 375,866
Contributory value of ADU (based on income) ($) 137,183 30,230 93,406 130,991 210,679
Property value by income (VI) ($) 408,624 88,939 272,660 440,890 508,098
Difference between valuation and actual ($) 29,067 44,207 (29,322) 21,410 128,182
Difference between valuation and sale price (%) 9.8 14.2 -5.9 5.1 37.7
The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units
306
37. Fanning, Blazejack, and Mann, “Price versus Fundamentals.”
If the appraiser and client decide the income
approach is necessary for achieving credible results,
there are several choices for the format of the report.
The most appropriate form might be Fannie Mae Form
1025, the Small Residential Income Property Appraisal
Report, frequently used for 2
4 unit income-producing
properties. It can describe the particularities of a
property with an ADU and report the development and
results of the income capitalization approach to value.
Alternatively, Fannie Mae Form 1004, the
Uniform Residential Appraisal Report (URAR), is
commonly used for single-unit residential appraisals
but is flexible enough to adequately describe a
property with an ADU. If applying the income
approach to the primary dwelling as well as the
ADU, it is likely that two additional Single Family
Comparable Rent Schedules (e.g., Fannie Mae
Form 1007) will be necessary to report the opinions
of market rent, one for each dwelling. Additional
analysis and discussion can be included in the
income approach section of the URAR as well as any
type of comment addendum.
Interpretation of Valuations and Theories of Value
Valuations based on income may diverge significantly
from those based on sales and create opportunities for
misinterpretation. For example, the results based on
the rent discount formula found the average Portland
ADU contributed 34% of the property’s value. Does that
mean adding an ADU to a single-unit property will
immediately increase its market value by 0.34/(1– 0.34),
or 51%? Experience in the market suggests the answer
is no. The divergence in expectations flows not from
an inherent faultiness in the income capitalization
approach, but from two different perspectives of value.
Market prices, such as the actual sale prices used
in the Portland study, seem most relevant to owners
or lienholders who want to sell or buy property in
the short term. These are transactional data,37 i.e.,
specific, concrete prices that buyers have actually
Figure 3 Appraised Values Based on Income versus Sale Prices, 14 Portland Properties
Featuring ADUs
$400,000
$300,000
$200,000
$100,000
$600,000
$500,000
Appraised Value or Sale Price
Land Discount Formula Rent Discount Formula
Valuation with ADU
Valuation without ADU
Sale Price
a Properties with attached ADU; others are detached
a
a
a
a
Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 307
38. Ibid.
paid. It is unclear how repeatable each sale price is,
given the specific and individual nature of real estate
transactions on residential properties, which involve
emotions, transient opportunities for financing, and
so forth. This is not saying the market is entirely
arbitrary, merely that individual sale prices are not
faultless indicators of value.
Meanwhile, valuation by income seems most
relevant to the owner or investor interested in
operating a property over a long period. Though
valuation by income is not wholly separated from the
noise of the transaction market, it does incorporate
more fundamental data,38 the market rents for
similar dwellings, which express the productivity
of the property. Adding an ADU to a single-unit
property could reasonably add 51% to longer-term
measures of value or return
a situation that market
sale prices may eventually recognize.
The differences between appraised value by
income and sale price in the study properties suggests
there may be an investment opportunity for parties
willing to buy or develop Portland properties with
ADUs and hold them for a long period, renting one
or both units for income. Such parties could include
homebuyers or investors planning to stay involved
in a neighborhood long term; lenders willing to
lend such buyers money and consider the income
capitalization approach in their lending decisions;
real estate investment trusts; and nonprofit housing
organizations such as land trusts.
However, for the Portland properties studied, few
buyers seemed to be competing for these properties
from an income-investing perspective. Eleven of the 14
properties were owner-occupied, suggesting absentee
landlords were not a major presence. Sale prices for
these properties were below what the GRMs suggested
income investors might be willing to pay. Nevertheless
buyers (and by implication, the appraisers working
for their lenders) seemed to be finding some value in
accessory dwellings, since in every case in the study, the
actual sale price was more than the contributory value
(via the income capitalization approach) of the primary
dwelling. The difference between mean contributory
value for the primary dwelling, in the rent discount
scenario, and mean actual sale price was $108,116.
The Role of Reconciliation
For practicing appraisers, these results demonstrate
that an income capitalization approach to value can
provide valuable perspective to the sales comparison
approach when the subject property features an
ADU. When an institution such as Freddie Mac for-
bids the income approach as the primary method of
valuation, the income method can still play a role in
the reconciliation phase, lending weight to any final
opinion of value developed via the sales comparison
or cost approaches. This should be especially useful
when precise comparables are rare, as properties
featuring legal ADUs are likely to be in the short
term. Over the long term, though, this form of
microdevelopment seems so attractive to planners
and certain citizens that appraisers may eventually
find them common.
Conclusion
Properties with permitted ADUs have been widely
misunderstood by real estate professionals. Besides the
social and environmental benefits they may provide,
ADUs have legitimate income potential, and when
income is the basis for valuation, perceptions of the
value of these properties can change substantially.
Appraisers requiring an alternative or counterpoint to
the sales comparison approach for properties featuring
ADUs can gain insight through the income approach,
helping them develop more credible and consistent
valuations for this emerging form of development.
The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units
308
Martin John Brownis a writer and researcher with a
background in statistics and ecology, and an interest in
architecture and development. As an analyst, Brown’s
research and statistical analysis have been published
in rigorous peer-reviewed journals such as the Journal
of Ecology and The American Naturalist. As a popular
writer, his reporting on environment and housing have
appeared in numerous popular publications, including
Sierra, MAKE, EThe Environmental Magazine, Air &
Space/Smithsonian, and GOOD. He has also coau-
thored two nonction books from national publishers.
Brown has a BS in biology from McGill University.
Contact: mjb2000@gmail.com
Taylor Watkinsis a certied residential appraiser
and the owner of Watkins & Associates, a leader
in data collection and appraisal of green homes in
Portland, Oregon. Since 1990, he has been providing
residential real estate valuations for the mortgage-
lending marketplace as well as real estate consulting
services in the Portland and Vancouver, Washington,
areas. Taylor is a member of the Appraisal Institute
and AI’s Green Education Committee; he developed
the Appraisal Institute’s new Introduction to Green
Buildings course. Taylor also is a member of the US
Green Building Council. He has an MA in English from
Portland State University and a BA in English from the
University of Oregon.
Contact: taylor.watkins@comcast.net
This work was supported by a grant from The
Appraisers Research Foundation and a grant of ser-
vices from rdbOregon.com. The manuscript beneted
greatly from the comments of Sandra Adomatis, SRA,
and three anonymous peer reviewers.
Web Connections
Internet resources suggested by the Y. T. and Louise Lee Lum Library
AARP
Accessory Dwelling Units, Model Laws
http://www.transformca.org/ia/acssdwel/sup/AARP+APA_ADUReport_ModelAct+Ordinance.pdf
AccessoryDwellings.org
http://accessorydwellings.org
American Planning Association
Accessory Dwelling Units
http://www.planning.org/pas/quicknotes/pdf/QN19.pdf
Florida Department of Community Services
Accessory Dwelling Units Report to the Florida Legislature
http://law.wustl.edu/landuselaw/Articles/ADU.Report.pdf
Municipal Research and Services Center of Washington
Accessory Dwelling Units
http://www.mrsc.org/publications/textadu.aspx
National Resource Center on Supportive Housing and Home Modification
http://gero.usc.edu/nrcshhm/library/PDF/access.pdf
US Department of Housing and Urban Development
Accessory Dwelling Units: Case Study
http://www.huduser.org/portal/publications/adu.pdf
Understanding and Appraising Properties with Accessory Dwelling Units The Appraisal Journal, Fall 2012 309
... 27 Primary sampling unit is a geographical or administrative unit used for sampling; it helps ensure geographical representation in the sample. 28,29 Whereas a DU is a physical unit where people reside and represent the actual places where data are collected. 27 The PSUs are selected first in the sampling process and thereafter DUs are selected within those PSUs. ...
... 27 The PSUs are selected first in the sampling process and thereafter DUs are selected within those PSUs. 28,29 The response rate of the 2019 GHS was 87.2%. 27 Further information about the GHS sampling, study setting and weighting can be found in the 2019 GHS metadata report. ...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Chronic diseases tend to affect the quality of life for older persons worldwide, especially in resource-constrained developing countries. Chronic diseases contribute to a large number of deaths among the population of South Africa. Aim: This study examines the determinants of self-reported chronic disease diagnoses among older persons in South Africa. Setting: The study setting was South Africa. Methods: Cross-sectional data from the 2019 South Africa General Household Survey were analysed (n [weighted] = 4 887 334). We fitted a binary logistic regression model to determine the relationship between socio-demographic factors and being diagnosed with self-reported chronic diseases. Results: We found that at least 5 in 10 older persons were diagnosed with self-reported chronic disease. The bivariate findings showed that age, population group, sex, marital status, level of education, disability status, household composition and province were significantly associated with self-reported chronic disease diagnoses. At the multivariate level, we found that age, sex, population group, marital status, educational level, disability status, household wealth status, household composition and province were key predictors of self-reported chronic disease diagnoses. Conclusion: We found that various factors were key determinants of being diagnosed with self-reported chronic diseases. This study offers important insights into the main correlations between older adults and self-reported chronic illness diagnoses. More study is required on the health of the elderly as it will help direct policy discussions and improve the development of health policies about the elderly. Contribution: This study highlights the need for a better understanding of, and continued research into, the determinants health among older populations to guide future healthcare strategies.
... It can also be difficult for homeowners to obtain financing to build an ADU (Peterson, 2018). Many lenders refuse to finance loans to build ADUs unless they are based on the homeowners' equity in the primary house (Been et al., 2014;J. Brown & Watkins, 2012;Chapple et al., 2017;Wegmann, 2015). In addition, lenders typically do not consider rental income anticipated from an ADU when determining whether the homeowner qualifies for financing to build it (Been et al., 2014;J. Brown & Watkins, 2012), largely due to federal financing guidelines. Fannie Mae, for example, generally requires that "b ...
... loans to build ADUs unless they are based on the homeowners' equity in the primary house (Been et al., 2014;J. Brown & Watkins, 2012;Chapple et al., 2017;Wegmann, 2015). In addition, lenders typically do not consider rental income anticipated from an ADU when determining whether the homeowner qualifies for financing to build it (Been et al., 2014;J. Brown & Watkins, 2012), largely due to federal financing guidelines. Fannie Mae, for example, generally requires that "borrower[s] must qualify for the mortgage without considering any rental income from the ADU" (Fannie Mae, 2021). This is especially problematic for lower income homeowners and those with little equity in their house. That includes many Black ...
Article
Full-text available
Problem, research strategy, and findings Accessory dwelling units (ADUs) are once again a hot topic, as communities across the United States face housing shortages and rising housing costs. For planners and policymakers attempting to facilitate ADU development, it is important to understand the homeowners who do not yet have one. Yet there is remarkably limited research on whether those homeowners are open to building an ADU, what motivations and obstacles they perceive regarding adding one, and why some homeowners do not want to build one at all. We surveyed 502 single-family homeowners in the Sacramento (CA) metropolitan area to investigate those three questions. Our findings suggest that up to 47% of single-family detached homeowners in the city of Sacramento could be open to building an ADU. Homeowners’ top-ranked motivation for adding one was housing themselves, family, or friends in the future. Cost-related concerns ranked as the biggest perceived obstacles. Homeowners who did not want an ADU cited a mixture of logistical challenges and potentially more immutable personal preferences. Takeaway for practice Our findings suggest five lessons for planners. First, permissive regulation is an essential, but not sufficient, step toward addressing homeowners’ perceptions of regulatory obstacles. Second, local government regulations are not the only source of ADU restrictions. Third, even where ADUs are technically allowed, it can still be an arduous process to get one permitted. Fourth, cost remains a big obstacle to building ADUs. Fifth, homeowners—especially low-income households—need better financing options.
... In planning literature, ADUs are pictured as an infill development tool that can optimize material and social infrastructures (sewers, aqueducts, roads, schools, community centres) (McConnell & Wiley, 2011) and as an additional source of property taxes for cities (J. M. Brown & Watkins, 2012). It's implied that by redirecting some of the housing development towards urbanized neighbourhoods and reducing pressure for greenfield development, ADUs will play a role in limiting urban sprawl. ...
Preprint
Full-text available
This qualitative case study provides an overview of regulations and building practices for detached accessory dwelling units (DADUs) in four Canadian cities: Vancouver, Edmonton, Toronto and Ottawa. Methods include documentary analysis, regulatory analysis and semi-structured interviews. Based on this multiple case study, some issues with current regulations were identified. Factors that are driving up cost and reducing uptake include being too prescriptive about design guidelines, as Vancouver's experience shows. In Ottawa, the obligation to choose between having either a DADU or a secondary suite in the main dwelling and size and height limitations are preventing widespread adoption. In terms of best practices, the City of Edmonton has developed a permissive regulatory framework by working closely with local experts. This allowed DADUs to answer a range of housing needs at a relatively low build cost, favoured the emergence of innovative practices, and resulted in an increasing proportion of infill development citywide.
... Despite intrigue from policy makers and widespread fear among residents that ADUs lower property values (Harris & Kinsella, 2017), there is relatively little empirical evidence on the effect of ADUs on property values. Brown and Watkins (2012) find that ADUs account for about 30% of the total property value of lots with ADUs. However, Sirmans and Macphearson (2003) find that, if one controls for additional square footage, bathrooms, and bedrooms contained within the ADU, the presence of an ADU actually significantly lowers the property value by about 5%. ...
Article
Full-text available
We study the impact of legalizing the rental of Accessory Dwelling Units (ADUs) on property values. We use a dataset of property sales in Ogden, Utah both before and after a policy change legalizing ADU rentals in 2016. We apply repeat sales and differences-in-difference methods to evaluate the impact of the ordinance on property values. Theoretically, the ordinance could increase property values due to the higher expected returns available from ADU rental income, however, potential congestion, noise, and parking issues could alternatively cause property values to decrease. In our analysis, we find no significant impact of ADU legalization on property values in areas affected by the policy change compared to unaffected areas. These results are robust to a number of different model specifications. Several features of Ogden’s real estate market and policy environment may also contribute to this null result including challenges in effectively prohibiting black market long-term ADU rentals in areas where they remain illegal and/or property owners using ADUs for short-term vacation rentals which is legal city-wide. These results suggest that legalizing residential ADU rentals may be an effective way to increase the supply of affordable rental housing and provide supplemental income to homeowners without negatively impacting property values.
... Because of this and other factors, homes with ADUs were found in one study to be undervalued by up to 9.8%. 13 5 Another barrier can be the experience level of the ADU developer. Those building ADUs tend to be homeowners unfamiliar with real estate and construction and see building an ADU as a major and risky project. ...
... Lenders are often reluctant to approve mortgages for ADUs (M. J. Brown and Palmeri 2014; M. J. Brown and Watkins 2012;Peterson 2018), forcing homeowners or homebuyers to borrow against the equity of existing properties, draw from home equity lines of credit, or practice sweat equity (M. J. Brown and Palmeri 2014;Buker 2015;Chapple et al. 2017;Peterson 2018). ...
Article
Accessory dwelling units (ADUs) are a strategy for providing affordable rental housing. We suggest a typology of regulatory approaches in Long Island, New York, differentiating between jurisdictions that allow nonfamily/nondomestic employee renters in ADUs (Type 1), allow only family members and domestic employees in ADUs (Type 2), and do not allow any ADUs (Type 3). Content analysis, descriptive statistics, and t tests reveal that there is variation among occupancy and design regulations, suggesting that jurisdictional fragmentation and exclusionary zoning present obstacles to using ADUs as an affordable housing strategy.
Article
Using data from Los Angeles, this article explores the locational determinants as well as the assessed‐value effects of the presence of accessory dwelling units (ADUs). The results show that ADUs are less likely to be found on large parcels containing newer houses and at dense locations near the CBD, the LAX airport, and beaches. ADU presence is more likely close to commercial districts, light‐rail stations, and educational establishments but less likely in higher income areas and Black neighborhoods, although parcels in Latino neighborhoods are more likely to contain ADUs. The assessed‐value regressions show that ADU presence raises a parcel's assessed value and selling price by 7%–9%, while also accurately capturing the unusual rules for property assessments under California's Proposition 13.
Article
Full-text available
Cities have a large supply of garages that could be converted into affordable housing in single-family neighborhoods, but minimum parking requirements prevent converting most of these garages into apartments. We examine how cities can relax off-street parking requirements for houses with converted garages. In Residential Parking Permit Districts, cities can limit the number of on-street parking permits allowed at any address with a second unit. This policy can remove on-street parking congestion as a reason for neighbors to oppose garage conversions, double the potential number of housing units in single-family neighborhoods, and increase the supply of safe, affordable housing.
Article
Full-text available
Airbnb or other similar platforms have evolved greatly in recent years and managed to change the perception of accommodation, in the same manner as Uber has changed the perception of public transport. Renting for tourism purposes, through Airbnb type platforms, has a direct impact on investors, state institutions, real estate markets and so on. The purpose of this paper is to analyze the effect of Airbnb type platforms on the Romanian real estate market and to describe the difficulties encountered in evaluating the properties that produce hotel rental income. These analyzes are intended in order to highlight an empirical perspective on this trend. The study consisted of a thorough online research, that took also into consideration legislation in force. In this paper I have presented a series of assessments of the impact on the market value of residential properties in Romania, which the properties listed for rent on Airbnb, seem to have.
Research
Full-text available
Issu d’un partenariat entre l’Arpent et la Société canadienne d’hypothèques et de logement (SCHL), ce guide sur les unités d’habitation accessoires (UHA) est un document d’accompagnement ainsi qu’un support à la réflexion des municipalités qui s’intéressent à ce type d’habitation. Puisant à la fois dans l’expérience des villes canadiennes et étatsuniennes et dans une vaste revue des études scientifiques, ce guide vise à encourager les bonnes pratiques et à stimuler l’adoption de réglementations habilitantes concernant les UHA au Canada. Tout d’abord sont présentés l’historique des UHA au Canada et les bénéfices qui leur sont associés. Dans la deuxième section sont réunis quelques grands principes qui font consensus au sujet des UHA relativement aux zones à prioriser pour leur développement, à leur design global, à leur insertion dans différents milieux ainsi que plusieurs enseignements réglementaires des villes canadiennes et étatsuniennes. Finalement, le guide se termine avec une étude de cas sur la consultation publique récemment menée par la Ville d’Ottawa préalablement à l’adoption de son cadre réglementaire habilitant pour les UHA. En consultant ce guide, le lecteur ou la lectrice sera mieux informé (e) des avantages et des principes de base relatifs aux UHA et sera mieux outillé (e) pour s’engager dans l’adoption d’une réglementation habilitante.
ResearchGate has not been able to resolve any references for this publication.