New Census Population Estimates

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The_Overdog
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby The_Overdog » 19 Apr 2019 11:17

I don't really find the 'county size' argument to be all that persuasive, as let's take the Houston numbers again, even with the combined county size:

From Cord:
Dallas + Tarrant: 532,866 (1,811 sq mi)
DFW otherwise: 216 + 192 + 145: 553k ~ close enough to 49/51.

Houston:
590
Houston otherwise: 197 + 131 + 129: 457 ~ 60%/40%

LA is even more dramatic I do believe, and LA county is more E-W than N-S (along the more valuable coastline).

Under all these metrics, DFW is growing but also sprawling more than Houston or LA.

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Mgreen15
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Mgreen15 » 23 May 2019 16:54

The US Census Bureau released it’s population estimates for cities today and the data obtained between July 1, 2017 and July 1, 2018 doesn’t look so good for Dallas.

Fort Worth gained 19,522 (895,008) and is 3rd in terms of largest numeric increase. Dallas gained just 1,960 (1,345,047) over the same time period.

According to these estimates, Dallas has steadily gained close to 20,000 people on a yearly basis since 2010, so I wonder if the new estimate is more of a correction to over estimated gains in years past.
Last edited by Mgreen15 on 23 May 2019 17:21, edited 2 times in total.

DPatel304
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby DPatel304 » 23 May 2019 17:12

^Wow, thanks for sharing. That number looks extremely low, but I'm curious to see how other cities (aside from Fort Worth) fared during the same time frame.

I figured we were due for a slow-down, but that is quite a drastic drop from the year before.

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Hannibal Lecter
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Hannibal Lecter » 27 May 2019 02:59

This was a surprise: Fort Worth has passed San Francisco and Columbus to become the 13th most populous American city.

Five of the 13 most populous cities in the country lie along the I-10/I-35/I-45 triangle.

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LuvBigD
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby LuvBigD » 04 Jun 2019 13:51

Mgreen15 wrote:The US Census Bureau released it’s population estimates for cities today and the data obtained between July 1, 2017 and July 1, 2018 doesn’t look so good for Dallas.

Fort Worth gained 19,522 (895,008) and is 3rd in terms of largest numeric increase. Dallas gained just 1,960 (1,345,047) over the same time period.

According to these estimates, Dallas has steadily gained close to 20,000 people on a yearly basis since 2010, so I wonder if the new estimate is more of a correction to over estimated gains in years past.


That Dallas number looks like it's missing a digit.

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Mgreen15
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Mgreen15 » 04 Jun 2019 22:29

LuvBigD wrote:
Mgreen15 wrote:The US Census Bureau released it’s population estimates for cities today and the data obtained between July 1, 2017 and July 1, 2018 doesn’t look so good for Dallas.

Fort Worth gained 19,522 (895,008) and is 3rd in terms of largest numeric increase. Dallas gained just 1,960 (1,345,047) over the same time period.

According to these estimates, Dallas has steadily gained close to 20,000 people on a yearly basis since 2010, so I wonder if the new estimate is more of a correction to over estimated gains in years past.


That Dallas number looks like it's missing a digit.


Considering Dallas’ growth trend from 2010-2017... it really does seem like this is missing a digit. But this is correct, according to the census bureau. I would like to understand their process of gathering information for these yearly estimates and if the data is truly accurate.

You can see the year by year population estimates here:

https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tab ... l?src=bkmk

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I45Tex
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby I45Tex » 30 Dec 2019 16:42

It will be a few months before annual metro population estimates for 7/1/2019 come out, but the state and national ones were released today.

https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-r ... ation.html

Texas gained an estimated 367,000 in the twelve month period, for a total of 3,850,000 since the last census. The gain will be 4,125,000 in ten years if the latest annual rate continues up to April 1, 2020.
And the only states which have gained more than 20% as many new residents so far are Florida (2,673,000), North Carolina (952K), Georgia (929K), Washington (890K), and Arizona (886K, or 23% as many as Texas).

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Tucy
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tucy » 31 Dec 2019 13:19

I45Tex wrote:It will be a few months before annual metro population estimates for 7/1/2019 come out, but the state and national ones were released today.

https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-r ... ation.html

Texas gained an estimated 367,000 in the twelve month period, for a total of 3,850,000 since the last census. The gain will be 4,125,000 in ten years if the latest annual rate continues up to April 1, 2020.
And the only states which have gained more than 20% as many new residents so far are Florida (2,673,000), North Carolina (952K), Georgia (929K), Washington (890K), and Arizona (886K, or 23% as many as Texas).


Texas will likely gain another two congressional seats.

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dch526
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby dch526 » 02 Jan 2020 11:12

Tucy wrote:
I45Tex wrote:It will be a few months before annual metro population estimates for 7/1/2019 come out, but the state and national ones were released today.

https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-r ... ation.html

Texas gained an estimated 367,000 in the twelve month period, for a total of 3,850,000 since the last census. The gain will be 4,125,000 in ten years if the latest annual rate continues up to April 1, 2020.
And the only states which have gained more than 20% as many new residents so far are Florida (2,673,000), North Carolina (952K), Georgia (929K), Washington (890K), and Arizona (886K, or 23% as many as Texas).


Texas will likely gain another two congressional seats.


2 at a minimum with a good shot at 3.

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Cord1936
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Cord1936 » 12 Jan 2020 18:56

Image
Dallas-Fort Worth could see biggest population surge in U.S. through 2029, study says
By John Egan, CultureMap Dallas, Jan 9, 2020, 3:32 pm

Brace yourselves, North Texans. Following a decade of eye-popping population growth, Dallas-Fort Worth is expected in this decade to once again lead the nation’s metro areas for the number of new residents.

New data from commercial real estate services company Cushman & Wakefield shows DFW gained 1,349,378 residents from 2010 through 2019. In terms of the number of new residents tallied during the past decade, DFW ranked first among U.S. metro areas, the data indicates.

From 2020 through 2029, DFW is projected to tack on another 1,393,623 residents, Cushman & Wakefield says.

For the second decade in a row, that would be the highest number of new residents for any metro area, the company says. By comparison, the Oklahoma City metro area was home to nearly 1.4 million people in 2018.
...
As of July 2018, the Census Bureau estimated 7,539,711 people lived in DFW. Under the Cushman & Wakefield scenario, DFW’s population would swell to about 9 million by the time the calendar flips to 2030.
...
Today, DFW is the fourth largest metro area in the U.S., behind New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago. The population of Chicago, the third largest metro area, barely budged from 2010 to 2018, according to the Census Bureau. Today, about 9.46 million people live in the Windy City and its suburbs.

If the Chicago area’s population growth remains relatively flat, DFW’s headcount conceivably could surpass Chicago’s in the not-too-distant future.
...
A key barometer for DFW’s growth prospects is the size of its tech workforce.

A July 2019 report from commercial real estate services company CBRE found that only the San Francisco Bay Area, New York City, and Washington, D.C., beat DFW for the depth of the pool of tech workers in U.S. metro areas.

The trend of corporate relocations to the Dallas-Fort Worth area isn’t slowing down,” Clay Vaughn, senior vice president of CBRE’s tech and media practice in Dallas, said in a release. “The favorable business climate and available tech talent in Dallas has made it one of the top startup markets in the U.S., which further incentivizes companies to move to the area.”
...
Full article: http://dallas.culturemap.com/news/city-life/01-09-20-dfw-lead-population-growth-2020-2029-cushman-wakefield/?utm_source=Dallas+Magazine&utm_campaign=a567130ff8-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_10_09_09_23_COPY_02&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_d83922037a-a567130ff8-106717359

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Tucy
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tucy » 12 Jan 2020 19:41

Cord1936 wrote:Image
Dallas-Fort Worth could see biggest population surge in U.S. through 2029, study says
By John Egan, CultureMap Dallas, Jan 9, 2020, 3:32 pm

[b]For the second decade in a row, that would be the highest number of new residents for any metro area, the company says[/b]. By comparison, the Oklahoma City metro area was home to nearly 1.4 million people in 2018.

Full article: http://dallas.culturemap.com/news/city-life/01-09-20-dfw-lead-population-growth-2020-2029-cushman-wakefield/?utm_source=Dallas+Magazine&utm_campaign=a567130ff8-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_10_09_09_23_COPY_02&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_d83922037a-a567130ff8-106717359



I'm not sure that's true. Did DFW really add more people than any other metro from 2000 to 2010? (I think Houston may have outpaced us.)

From the Census Bureau:

DFW: 6,371,773 (2010) 5,161,544 (2000) 1,210,228 added

Houston: 5,946,800 (2010) 4,715,407 (2000) 1,231,393 added.

VERY close, but DFW did NOT add the most people in the previous decade.

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Cord1936
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Cord1936 » 12 Jan 2020 22:14

Tucy wrote:
Cord1936 wrote:Image
Dallas-Fort Worth could see biggest population surge in U.S. through 2029, study says
By John Egan, CultureMap Dallas, Jan 9, 2020, 3:32 pm

[b]For the second decade in a row, that would be the highest number of new residents for any metro area, the company says[/b]. By comparison, the Oklahoma City metro area was home to nearly 1.4 million people in 2018.

Full article: http://dallas.culturemap.com/news/city-life/01-09-20-dfw-lead-population-growth-2020-2029-cushman-wakefield/?utm_source=Dallas+Magazine&utm_campaign=a567130ff8-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_10_09_09_23_COPY_02&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_d83922037a-a567130ff8-106717359



I'm not sure that's true. Did DFW really add more people than any other metro from 2000 to 2010? (I think Houston may have outpaced us.)

From the Census Bureau:

DFW: 6,371,773 (2010) 5,161,544 (2000) 1,210,228 added

Houston: 5,946,800 (2010) 4,715,407 (2000) 1,231,393 added.

VERY close, but DFW did NOT add the most people in the previous decade.

^^^^^^^

CBRE is using a different measurement period than what you referenced.

They are counting the decade from 2000-2009, 2010-2019, and 2020-2029.

CBRE performed the analysis used in the article but that seems to be how they are measuring the "decade" they reference. It actually is ten years when you count their first year (2000, 2010, 2020) as year one and the tenth year is 2009, 2019, and 2029.

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jetnd87
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby jetnd87 » 14 Jan 2020 16:21

Assuming this pace of population increase continues, it will be interesting to see how the people and developments are allocated to urban areas, Dallas proper, and suburbs. Even if the increase continues as it has - most going to suburbs - it should still instigate a ton of new urban development. I'm hoping that the split will be a bit closer to 50/50, which I think puts Dallas squarely on a path to true "urban-hood".

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby DPatel304 » 14 Jan 2020 16:40

jetnd87 wrote:Assuming this pace of population increase continues, it will be interesting to see how the people and developments are allocated to urban areas, Dallas proper, and suburbs. Even if the increase continues as it has - most going to suburbs - it should still instigate a ton of new urban development. I'm hoping that the split will be a bit closer to 50/50, which I think puts Dallas squarely on a path to true "urban-hood".


This sounds about right, and I think we are definitely trending in this direction.

What could be interesting is seeing suburbs to the south and east of Downtown start to flourish. Yes it would still be suburban growth, but it would help pull the 'focal point' of DFW back towards Downtown which would make the CBD even more attractive for companies to locate.

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Tucy
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tucy » 14 Jan 2020 17:56

jetnd87 wrote:Assuming this pace of population increase continues, it will be interesting to see how the people and developments are allocated to urban areas, Dallas proper, and suburbs. Even if the increase continues as it has - most going to suburbs - it should still instigate a ton of new urban development. I'm hoping that the split will be a bit closer to 50/50, which I think puts Dallas squarely on a path to true "urban-hood".


What do you suppose the split has been in the past decade?

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jetnd87
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby jetnd87 » 14 Jan 2020 19:38

So per this article, DFW added ~1.35M residents. I've seen some sources say that Dallas city proper added ~150K residents from 2010-2019. So the mix was around 10:90 Dallas:Suburbs (incl. FW). Now within that 10%, I have no idea how much was in "urban" vs. non-urban neighborhoods. Even if we just shift slightly towards parity - say 15-20% in Dallas proper - that should drive a ton of urban development. I'm hopeful that with a lot of the changes since 2010 and the limits of growing McMansions up north, it's higher than that. But who knows.

Regardless, if these population projections are remotely true, there should be a solid business case for many, many new projects in and around the urban core, which will drive us to the density inflection point.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby muncien » 15 Jan 2020 08:46

One thing that is obvious (but still worth noting), is that the boom in the burbs is not taking share from urban areas. Instead, it is cannibalizing other burbs (inner-burbs) for the most part. It will be interesting to see how these areas adapt to these changing circumstances. There are some neighborhoods that we saw being constructed brand new when we were young, that are no downright dilapidated. Many have found a way survive just fine, but others seem to struggle.
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The_Overdog
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby The_Overdog » 15 Jan 2020 09:33

Which inner ring suburbs lost population? I'm not finding the list? Garland and Mesquite, maybe?

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muncien
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby muncien » 15 Jan 2020 09:50

The_Overdog wrote:Which inner ring suburbs lost population? I'm not finding the list? Garland and Mesquite, maybe?


I'm not saying any burb in its entirety lost population as most burbs have fringes with plenty of land to develop. But there are significant 'hoods' in places like Garland, Carrolton, Lewisville, Grand Prairie, and Irving, that have gone down hill in favor of flashier, newer housing.
Some of that has slowed down with the recent surge in the economy as 'flippers' have found a way to make a little $ on them, but they won't fair well at all during another recession. The rather poor quality of home construction during early booms means a decent amount of $ must be put into them to keep them relevant. That doesn't even speak to the failing infrastructure in these neighborhoods who's value doesn't offset the expense of long term maintenance. Anybody walking on a sidewalk in those neighborhoods, experiencing a water main break, or navigating around pot holes knows what I'm talking about.
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tivo_Kenevil » 15 Jan 2020 10:32

Can confirm Garland and Mesquite and Parts South of the Irving Convention Center in Irving are in rough shape. Arlington is ugly everywhere. I think Plano and Richardson have done a better job in staying relevant and more liveable when compared to other inner ring Suburbs. Im not familiar with Carrollton. It's the cyclical nature of Suburbs.

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The_Overdog
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby The_Overdog » 15 Jan 2020 10:46

I think Plano and Richardson have done a better job in staying relevant and more liveable when compared to other inner ring Suburbs. Im not familiar with Carrollton. It's the cyclical nature of Suburbs.


OK, I get what you are saying. It's kind of interesting that due to decreases in family size, lots of those older neighborhoods were built at close to 5k people per sq mile, and if you compare on a zip basis now, many have fallen to 1500-2000. That has profound effects on retail in the area, and high retail vacancy makes an area look even more rundown. It's a perplexing cycle.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby muncien » 15 Jan 2020 11:31

OMG... i can't believe I left out Arlington. Probably one of the best examples (worst). Funny though, as they aren't really an 'inner' ring suburb. I'm not sure what it is about Arlington, but so much of it is hurtin.
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby DPatel304 » 15 Jan 2020 11:54

I rarely go out to Arlington, but it just seems like it should be doing so much better than it actually is. It seems like it's decently well situated in the metroplex and looks to have pretty good access to the jobs in Downtown Fort Worth, Downtown Dallas, and Las Colinas, and they also have a mid-sized university there. Instead of focusing on those strengths, they seem to put all their efforts into being an entertainment district.

This is speaking as someone who doesn't really know much about Arlington and doesn't visit much, so I could be wrong here.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tnexster » 15 Jan 2020 12:46

Unless you go to a game I don't know why anybody would visit Arlington.

Interestingly, the Parks Mall is a fascinating place if you want to see what shopping was like two decades ago. That mall is a busy place, one of the busiest malls I have ever seen and is a very accurate representation of what malls used to be like in the 90's and before. So, that could be a reason to go, just to see that.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby I45Tex » 25 Mar 2020 16:46

There will not be a July 1 estimate for 2020 and we won't get the April 1 headcount until the Census results finish processing. However, tomorrow was scheduled to be the public release for July 1, 2019 estimates at the county and MSA level. Hope they finished everything in the release well ahead of the lockdowns!

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Tucy
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tucy » 27 Mar 2020 11:04

New Census Estimate for Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington:

July 1, 2019: 7,573,136
July 1, 2018: 7,455,756

Numerical Growth: 117,380
One-Year Growth Rate: 1.6%

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Mgreen15
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Mgreen15 » 01 Apr 2020 19:31

Dallas county shrinking...
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Hannibal Lecter
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Hannibal Lecter » 01 Apr 2020 20:38

My understanding is that for years the only thing that prevented a population decrease was Parkland Hospital. The annual county population increase was usually less than the number of babies born at Parkland.

Thirty years of subsidizing the bottom and the top of the economic ladder while making life miserable for the middle class is having it's inevitable result.

OCP welcomes you to New Detroit.

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The_Overdog
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby The_Overdog » 02 Apr 2020 09:52

Dallas County shrinking


It's 2000 people in 1 year. Most likely due to the tornado (and maybe a bit of a 500 unit apartment collapse).

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Mgreen15
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Mgreen15 » 02 Apr 2020 11:13

The_Overdog wrote:
Dallas County shrinking


It's 2000 people in 1 year. Most likely due to the tornado (and maybe a bit of a 500 unit apartment collapse).


This is a July 1, 2019 estimate. The tornado wouldn’t impact this estimate.

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Tivo_Kenevil
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tivo_Kenevil » 02 Apr 2020 12:50

A lot of the inner rings burbs are shite.
They get abandoned for newer digs all the time. Just look at Garland and Mesquite.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tnexster » 14 May 2020 16:27

If Dallas were somehow able to adequately develop south Dallas those numbers would likely turn.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Warrior2015 » 19 May 2020 15:58

Tnexster wrote:If Dallas were somehow able to adequately develop south Dallas those numbers would likely turn.


In order for that to happen there would have to be a black exodus and a white interest in order for development to take off down there.Other than that, its going to keep being "charity" like developments like a new wal mart or a new subway and then the city boasts about how much development is happening in south dallas. It should not take this long to develop south Dallas. It's literally the future of the city. Let's be honest, developers tend to not develop alot in black/brown neighborhoods unless they are trying to replace them. Facts.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby scott2 » 20 May 2020 15:37

i am not sure i agree with that. The local / regional developers have been ignoring the South and building North for decades. But now the DFW area is being looked at by national and even international investors who do not share that opinion.They see vast areas of undeveloped land 30 minutes or less from Downtown Dallas with excellent interstate highway access. Cheap land ( compared to the coasts ). What's not to like ?

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby I45Tex » 20 May 2020 16:23

I'm not sure why you disagree, Scott; that is precisely an example of the last thing that Warrior said.

Insiders or outsiders alike are interested in that land because it was artificially depressed in value through racist redlining policy. The Dallas residents who have been deprived of asset-building capacity, during all the time that they held on in these "well located" areas -- which remained depressed because they could not access the capital to fix them, and had to depend on outsiders to do so -- are citizens who could not get the capital to develop their own neighborhoods no matter what market intelligence they brought to the table. They are now supposed to get a move on as this intelligent market rate development prices them out.

Want to bet the city leaders finally find a way to improve their public services dramatically in South Dallas and South Oak Cliff, too, right around the time white investors with lobbyists become the most common landowners?

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby tamtagon » 20 May 2020 16:56

Redlining in metro Atlanta corralled poor minorities in the southern part of the area, similar as we see in Dallas. In Atlanta now, though, what's happening in many large swaths of real estate sequestered by the racist lending practices of the past sees very expensive neighborhoods going up. It's not as much about race or ethnicity, but income. Much of the prettiest geography in Dallas County - northern reaches of the hill country - had been similarly sequestered by redlining and is just waiting for the money to figure out Wynwood, Redbird, South Oak Cliff is sooooo much closer to Downtown than Plano/Frisco. It'll happen one day.

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I45Tex
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby I45Tex » 20 May 2020 17:03

But can a young person magically be "about income" just because they are someone promising who happens to get a few scholarships, out of a family and corralled community that have never had the choice of being "about income"?

Should they want to be about it, honestly, seeing what other Dallasites' participation in that gravy train did to South Dallas this whole time?

And will they have the option of participating in the New $outh Dallas otherwise?

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby tamtagon » 20 May 2020 17:17

Almost all will not have the option of participating in the New $outh Dallas. Unless the city comes up with a thoughtful, managed gentrification plan, the poor will simply be pushed away.

I still expect some of the region's most exclusive estates to straddle the escarpment in South Dallas County. There's still some hardwood forest...

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I45Tex
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby I45Tex » 20 May 2020 17:44

You're right about that beauty, but look at the big picture (returning to the Census growth topic). Texas has a claim to be strong economically if any state in the union does. But most counties are losing population while the ones that are growing are more socially fragile than ever, from reorganizing their whole way of life around chasing new business jobs.


Other places want those jobs too, and we're getting them. We must be competent. We must be good at it. But I don't really see Texas developing the kind of society that reinvents itself in more than a couple isolated places.


We're complacent in a way, because we are good at something there's much more competition for right now. It must be important! Nobody likes to hear that they're good at something that isn't important, or that is important but pointless and brittle, transactional.


We'll be in some trouble if that trick plays out, as our Texas Triangle cities sit at a less favorable cost structure / lifestyle recruitment position in the future. If we have been too busy chasing opportunity to treat each other well, or trust each other when money wasn't backstopping it, then we'll be just as brittle as the Rust Belt was. We have to ask if it's possible that, for the most part, Texas' community wealthbuilding position has peaked in the past couple of years, and what that would mean for North Texas' strategic decisionmaking.


There's the potential, at least, that there won't be as many more estates popping up as we're projecting; that demand will pop up conservatively, only adjacent to established luxury enclaves; and that the whole broad southern tier of the metro won't fill out any sooner than the whole western tier of Cincinnati is going to.

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Cord1936
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Cord1936 » 21 May 2020 13:12

Mgreen15 wrote:Dallas county shrinking...


Just curious where you found the table in your post that suggests a population decline for Dallas County?

In looking at March 26, 2020 census.gov data, RELEASE NUMBER CB20-53, it shows Dallas County grew by 6,166 year-over-year July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019:

https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2020/pop-estimates-county-metro.html

Image


In another observation from the March 26, 2020 census.gov data, RELEASE NUMBER CB20-53, Chicago MSA continues to shrink with a population loss of 25,619 while DFW MSA grew by 117,380.

DFW MSA was number one in population growth in 2019 by a large margin over most all other metro's ... third place Houston/Woodlands/Sugarland at 89,994 trailed the Dallas area by over 27,000 people.

Image

If this ongoing trend continues then DFW MSA will ascend to 3rd largest MSA in the nation within about another 10 years ... the Big Three metros in the nation will be New York, Los Angeles, Dallas.
Last edited by Cord1936 on 21 May 2020 20:11, edited 2 times in total.

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Hannibal Lecter
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Hannibal Lecter » 21 May 2020 14:11

Cord1936 wrote:In looking at March 26, 2020 census.gov data, RELEASE NUMBER CB20-53, it shows Dallas County grew by 6,166 year-over-year July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019:


Population increased slightly, but only due to births over deaths. More live folks voting with their feet moved out than moved in.

Fiscal 2019 births at Parkland alone: 12,642.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tnexster » 22 May 2020 15:05

scott2 wrote:i am not sure i agree with that. The local / regional developers have been ignoring the South and building North for decades. But now the DFW area is being looked at by national and even international investors who do not share that opinion.They see vast areas of undeveloped land 30 minutes or less from Downtown Dallas with excellent interstate highway access. Cheap land ( compared to the coasts ). What's not to like ?


I think this is true, Peter Brodsky who is developing RedBird is from the NE. Has a very bold vision of what the area can be. My fear for the RedBird area is that it's a success and then residents that call that area home get forced out, then replaced by millennials.

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Matt777
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Matt777 » 22 May 2020 17:14

Hannibal Lecter wrote:
Cord1936 wrote:In looking at March 26, 2020 census.gov data, RELEASE NUMBER CB20-53, it shows Dallas County grew by 6,166 year-over-year July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019:


Population increased slightly, but only due to births over deaths. More live folks voting with their feet moved out than moved in.

Fiscal 2019 births at Parkland alone: 12,642.


I'd be curious to see the demographic changes on income and age. Are we losing young, educated millenials or is this the result of homes that once held families now being empty nesters, homes that once held families now being bought and renovated by young couples who have less children or no children, or larger sized lower/mid income families being priced out and fleeing for some of our cheaper suburbs.

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Tucy
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tucy » 23 May 2020 10:22

Hannibal Lecter wrote:
Cord1936 wrote:In looking at March 26, 2020 census.gov data, RELEASE NUMBER CB20-53, it shows Dallas County grew by 6,166 year-over-year July 1, 2018 to July 1, 2019:


Population increased slightly, but only due to births over deaths. More live folks voting with their feet moved out than moved in.

Fiscal 2019 births at Parkland alone: 12,642.


Interesting. This spurred me to look up the components of Dallas County's population change:

From 2018 to 2019, the population increased by 6,166.
Natural Increase (births exceeded deaths): 21,327
Net Migration: -15,147, comprised of 9,242 positive net international migration and -24,389 (negative) net domestic migration.

The biggest net out-migration is to suburban counties, followed by other places in Texas (these are 2013-2017 numbers, the latest I could find):
Denton County: -9,298
Tarrant County: -5266
Collin County: -3,606
Kaufman County: -1,847
Travis County: -1418
Hunt County: -1,084
Rockwall County: -751
Harris County: -456
Rusk County: -434
Ector County: -416
Van Zandt County: -410
Last edited by Tucy on 23 May 2020 12:00, edited 1 time in total.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby tamtagon » 23 May 2020 11:26

763ba205311d3296bb2929826fc843b4_1024x1024.jpg
...hasn't that demographic trend happened in every big population center, especially in those population centers leading the social and cultural trends of the country?
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Tucy
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tucy » 23 May 2020 14:31

It is fairly common to see central counties showing international net in-migration and domestic net out-migration, but Dallas County is actually performing relatively poorly in these statistics. I just took a look at the numbers for the central counties of the 19 largest metro areas.

Dallas County is most similar to Los Angeles County, Cook County IL (Chicago), Wayne County MI (Detroit), and Suffolk County MA (Boston) with high relative domestic out-migration combined with relatively low-to-medium international in-migration.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Tnexster » 25 May 2020 11:19

I sat in on a webinar on the impact of the pandemic on urban centers and none of this is good news for any central city. Covid is already driving business to the suburban market because they see value in a location less prone to higher infection potential. It's great news for areas like Legacy West that could benefit from this latest trend. That trend also appears to hold true for more urban dwellers as the market for home rentals away from the city is suddenly growing. Point being that Covid could easily put more pressure on Dallas population numbers if out-migration takes hold.

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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby tamtagon » 26 May 2020 06:36

The fear of crowded places with a higher infection potential is temporary, for sure; if we get into a situation of novel viral pandemics rolling across a decade or two, then population density will flatten.... In the mean time, this is a perfect opportunity for Dallas to work on pedestrian infrastructure, guide the developing world with a rational plan that encourages walking.

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jetnd87
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby jetnd87 » 06 Feb 2021 18:34

https://austin.culturemap.com/news/real ... an-dallas/

Not sure where I should've posted this. Know that Dallas MSA is a much bigger area than Austin MSA. Didn't realize our housing supply plummeted >30% last year. Interested to hear this group's interpretation / reaction to above.

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Addison
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Re: New Census Population Estimates

Postby Addison » 08 Feb 2021 15:56

jetnd87 wrote:https://austin.culturemap.com/news/real-estate/02-05-21-austin-surprisingly-added-fewer-residents-last-year-than-dallas/

Not sure where I should've posted this. Know that Dallas MSA is a much bigger area than Austin MSA. Didn't realize our housing supply plummeted >30% last year. Interested to hear this group's interpretation / reaction to above.


Below is the report from RedFin they're referencing:

https://www.redfin.com/news/homebuyer-p ... tage-2020/

Some other observations:

1. Dallas MSA saw the 2nd largest inflow of residents (75,000), only falling behind Phoenix with an inflow of 80,000.

2. Dallas saw the 2nd largest plunge amongst major metros in YoY housing inventory (Specifically a decline of 35.7%).

3. Detroit MSA (of all places) was the only major metro to see a huge surge in new home construction, specifically 122% YoY.

4. Knoxville saw a *MASSIVE* surge in new home construction, up 246% YoY.

It will be interesting to see if Phoenix manages to surpass DFW as the fastest growing metro in the country. It was already starting to explode in the past several years, and COVID has seemingly accelerated that even more. All of the anecdotal evidence I've seen so far from 2020 suggests Phoenix now has greater net inflow than DFW.