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Modelling interactions of location with specific value of housing attributes

Marius Thériault (Director, Planning and Development Research Centre, Laval University, Quebec, Canada)
François Des Rosiers (Professor, Faculty of Business Administration, Laval University, Quebec, Canada)
Paul Villeneuve (Professor, Department of Planning, Laval University, Quebec, Canada)
Yan Kestens (PhD Candidate, Department of Planning, Laval University, Quebec, Canada)

Property Management

ISSN: 0263-7472

Article publication date: 1 March 2003

3012

Abstract

This paper presents a procedure for considering interactions of neighbourhood quality and property specifics within hedonic models of housing price. It handles interactions between geographical factors and the marginal contribution of each property attribute for enhancing values assessment. Making use of simulation procedures, it is combining GIS technology and spatial statistics to define principal components of accessibility and socio‐economic census related to transaction prices of single‐family homes. An application to the housing market of the Quebec Urban Community (more than 3,600 bungalows transacted in 1990 and 1991) illustrates its usefulness for building spatial hedonic models, while controlling for multicollinearity, spatial autocorrelation and heteroskedasticity. Distance‐weighted averages of each property attribute in the neighbourhood and interactions of property attributes with each principal component are used to detect any spatial effect on sale price variations. This first‐stage spatial hedonic model approximates market prices, which are then used in order to compare “expected” and actual property tax amounts, which are added to obtain a second‐stage model incorporating fiscal effects on house values. Interactions between geographical factors and property specifics are computed using formulae avoiding multicollinearity problems, while considering several processes responsible for spatial variability. For each property attribute, they define sub‐models which can be used to map variations, across the city, of its marginal value, assessing the cross‐effect of geographical location (in terms of neighbourhood profiles and accessibility to services) and its own valuation parameters. Moreover, this procedure distinguishes property attributes, exerting a stable contribution to value (constant over the entire region) from those whose implicit price significantly varies over space.

Keywords

Citation

Thériault, M., Des Rosiers, F., Villeneuve, P. and Kestens, Y. (2003), "Modelling interactions of location with specific value of housing attributes", Property Management, Vol. 21 No. 1, pp. 25-62. https://doi.org/10.1108/02637470310464472

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited

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