How Artists Influence Real Estate Prices Montrose CO

Artists can create culture and community in a depressed neighborhood, making it more popular and improving its economy and property prices. Read on and know more.

Office Space Denver
303-578-5389
1089 18Th St
Denver, CO
Longmont Commercial Real Estate
303-746-1490
8032 Centrebridge Dr.
Longmont, CO
KB Home
(303) 323-1112
5975 S. Quebec St. #300
Centennial, CO
UGL EQUIS
720554-0789
8350 E Crescent Pkwy Suite 300
Greenwood Village, CO
SOUTHVIEW PROPERTIES LLC
303795-2902
5820 S. Windermere st
Littleton, CO
Base Camp, LLC
(303) 565-3756
1553 Platte Street Suite 208
Denver, CO
Real Estate of The Rockies
(720) 470-2912
12061 Tejon Street
Westminster, CO
RE/MAX ALLIANCE DTC - KIKKERI
303349-8896
5350 S. Roselyn St. 105
Greeenwood Village, CO
Village Homes
(303) 703-8624
100 Inverness Terrace East, Ste.200
Englewood, CO
Carlson Parkhill, LLC
(303) 659-2646
1820 Platte Street
Denver, CO
Data Provided by:
 

How Artists Influence Real Estate Prices

Investors may deepen their appreciation for the arts after they realize how much influence artists can have on real estate values.

Not many artists can afford the expensive rents of trendy downtown areas, so most live in cheaper areas of cities. When an area is full of artists, it attracts new studios and galleries, restaurants and shops. This energy and culture can change a less-than-desirable neighborhood or city into a desirable one—with the property prices to match.

Greenwich Village New York City
Greenwich Village exemplifies artists' effects on real estate "It has been proved that artists—defined as self-employed visual artists, actors, musicians, writers, etc.—can stimulate local economies in a number of ways," according to BusinessWeek. Greenwich Village, in New York City, is perhaps the most widely known example of this pattern.

San Francisco, one of the most expensive real estate markets in the country, has another example of how artists can revitalize neighborhoods.

"Artists and small organizations have turned formerly empty sections of the city, such as the warehouse area south of Market Street, into a thriving and bustling neighborhood," according to Realty Times. "Artists move in, galleries and restaurants follow, then developers and real estate agents."

Once an area has heightened cultural activity, people with money tend to become more interested in it. But culture does more than draw wealth; it can also draw workers, improving an area's job market and thus its economy.

"Being a cultural center also helps local businesses attract employees who want to be able to regularly go to the ballet or the theater, hear authors read from their latest books or attend art-gallery openings," according to BusinessWeek.

Hampden, a neighborhood near Johns Hopkins University in northern Baltimore, is another neighborhood that has been turned around by artists. It was a mill town for most of its existence, but most of the mills were shut down during an economic downturn in the 1980s and 1990s.

"The arts and artists often play major roles in the revitalization of older city neighborhoods," according to Realty Times. That has been the case with Hampden, which hosts both the Baltimore Shakespeare Festival and HonFest, an annual festival at which attendees tease their hair into beehive hairdos and participate in a contest to find the best Bawlmerese—the nickname for Baltimore's accent.

"In recent years, young artists and entrepreneurs have increasingly discovered Hampden's offbeat appeal, and a new crop of funky galleries, boutiques and antiques shops has emerged among the pawnshops and dusty five-and-dimes along the 36th Street 'Avenue,'" according to The Washington Post.

Hampden's historic Rotunda shopping center is the site of an extensive multi-use development where construction is set to begin next year. The development has met with some controversy, since some long-time Hampden residents consider it at odds with the area's blue-collar pa...

Click here to read the rest of this article from NuWire Investor