Year Published
2018
Abstract
Urban rail transit investments are expensive and irreversible. Since people differ with
respect to their demand for trips, their value of time, and the types of real estate they live
in, such projects are likely to offer heterogeneous benefits to residents of a city. Defining the
opening of a major new subway in Seoul as a treatment for apartments close to the new rail
stations, we contrast hedonic estimates based on multivariate hedonic methods with a machine
learning approach. This ML approach yields new estimates of these heterogeneous effects.
While a majority of the “treated” apartment types appreciate in value, other types decline in
value. We cross-validate our estimates by studying what types of new housing units developers
build in the treated areas close to the new train lines.
respect to their demand for trips, their value of time, and the types of real estate they live
in, such projects are likely to offer heterogeneous benefits to residents of a city. Defining the
opening of a major new subway in Seoul as a treatment for apartments close to the new rail
stations, we contrast hedonic estimates based on multivariate hedonic methods with a machine
learning approach. This ML approach yields new estimates of these heterogeneous effects.
While a majority of the “treated” apartment types appreciate in value, other types decline in
value. We cross-validate our estimates by studying what types of new housing units developers
build in the treated areas close to the new train lines.
Research Category