• faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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    2 days ago

    See, it’s the opposite here. In the nearby city (pop 90k), the downtown areas are hellaciously expensive because they’re closest to amenities. The farther you get from grocery stores and bars, the cheaper it gets. It’s so weird to me that there are places where living next to shopping is cheaper than living far from shopping. It doesn’t help that the downtown apartments are being remodeled into luxe apartments and the suburbs and rural areas are where the affordable housing is being built.

    The suburbs are cheaper, but you have to drive to do the shopping, and the rural areas are cheapest because everything smells like cow when it rains, and you have to drive to do the shopping.

    Edit: My rural neighborhood is a combination of apartments, trailer homes, and detached housing, and it’s more than a mile from groceries.

    • FireRetardant@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      In my area it means you can rent something out thats had nothing but the bare minimums of renovations for the past 40-60 years and still get a decent market price for the unit. The stuff that is farther out is newer, more spacious, and often considered in a safer area, so they can ask for more. You are getting a better unit farther out but you gotta pay for it vs living in something run down but saving on rent and transportation.

      There exceptions of course, it really depends on the age and desirability of the neighborhood

      • faythofdragons@slrpnk.net
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        2 days ago

        The stuff that is farther out is newer

        But built shoddier and rented out cheaper in my area, haha. You could get a newly remodeled apartment in a historic brick building for $$$ downtown or a new apartment in a building that went up in a couple months and is already leaking for $.

        I think it depends enough on area that we really can’t make blanket statements.