What to Know About “Hipsturbia,” the Biggest Trend in Real Estate

Millennials and Gen Z are targeting cool suburbs, sometimes not by choice

Hipsturbia

Young adults are turning toward cool suburbs, according to real estate trends

By Kirk Miller

Turns out you can leave the city and still lead a cosmopolitan lifestyle in 2019.

And your less-than-ideal salary may force you to make that move. That’s according to findings in Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2020, a collaboration between the auditing firm PwC and the non-profit Urban Land Institute.

Now in its 41st edition, the Emerging Trends forecast “provides an outlook on real estate investment and development trends, real estate finance and capital markets, property sectors, metropolitan areas, and other real estate issues throughout the United States and Canada.” The report was conducted via surveys and interviews with a range of industry experts (brokers, investors, developers, etc.).

While the word “static” was used several times within the report to describe housing and property trends (which is definitely not a bad word), there were some interesting predictions for the near future, including: 

“Suburbs are taking a chance on mixed-use, walkable, millennials-attracting development,” as one focus group member put it in the report, citing “hip” areas around Atlanta such as Decatur and Alpharetta.

Or, as PwC Real Estate Leader Byron Carlock told Forbes, “The trend started in Brooklyn and has spread to secondary cities. Fun and cool places can be created. It’s where real estate meets people, interests and amenities.”

Which is real-estate-agent speak for, “You can’t afford to live in this city, bub.”

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