You and Axulus make the typical mistake of assuming textbook correlations would play out in the real world. Just because a builder saves on building costs does not mean those savings are going to be passed all the way down to the tenant dollar for dollar. No matter what the conditions of the apartment, the Landlord is going to try to get the highest rent the market will bear.Everything on the list would lower costs and therefore rent.
Of course he will. What you are missing is the invisible hand--if the landlord is making too much rent then people will build more rental units to cash in on this. Excess profit can only exist with government protection.
I don't work "at the edges of construction" - I am in the real estate market day in and day out including new construction.
Which doesn't give too much of a picture of construction costs. My experience was directly with creating the software that did the cost calculations for parts of the house.
No, density in and of itself is not going to be the factor in crime rates that make the OP suggestions wrong. It is treating poor people like animals without dignity that attracts crime to an area. It's a downward spiral.
Then why does the crime rate always go up with density? (Hint: It's not the density per se, but rather the fact that the density provides more opportunities for crime and more ability to hide the crime.)
So yes, let's strip low income housing of all it's landscaping, amenities and aesthetics - depressing and demoralizing. Let's force families with children to share a bathroom with the strangers next door - dangerous and a great way to spread disease. Even most colleges, where this "shared-bathroom" concept is most common, are rapidly moving away from that model. The vast majority of people do not like it, even if college students tolerated it for 4 years. You and Axulus want to make it a permanent condition for poor people?
We recognize that poor people can improve their lot.
