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NOLA people: thoughts on AirBnb?
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:25 pm
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:25 pm
quote:
A local housing rights group released a report Wednesday saying that regulations for short-term rentals in New Orleans put in place a year ago have done nothing to slow the gentrification of traditional neighborhoods or the displacement of residents
The Jane Place Neighborhood Sustainability Initiative's report, "Short-Term Rentals, Long-Term Impacts," says the city has been ineffective at preventing out-of-state owners from converting homes needed by local residents into hotels en masse.
“Airbnb pretends they are a home-sharing service, that their users are homeowners who are making ends meet by renting out their homes,” program manager Breonne DeDecker said. “But our report exposes that lie. What is happening in New Orleans is not home-sharing, but the hotelization of residential housing.”
.
quote:
The city's regulations, put in place a year ago, require those who rent out their homes using online platforms to register with the city and obtain one of three types of licenses. They also require Airbnb to contribute money to a city fund for affordable housing. The Jane Place analysis found there are 4,319 listings for entire homes in New Orleans on Airbnb alone, an increase of 232 percent since 2015. DeDecker said the top 10 short-term rental operators together control 568 units in New Orleans and that 18 percent of short-term rental operators control nearly half of the permitted properties. The report also said that 82 percent of Airbnb listings in the city are for whole homes available an average of 174 nights per year. “These operators are not strapped homeowners making ends meet by occasionally renting out space," DeDecker said. "And it is offensive for Airbnb and pro-short-term-rental lobbyists to pretend that these individuals and corporations are just homeowners trying to stay afloat.”
LINK
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:27 pm to Dire Wolf
"We need investment in our neighborhoods!"
"But with less white people!"
"But with less white people!"
This post was edited on 4/16/18 at 8:27 pm
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:28 pm to NIH
Yep. See the gentrification thread from last week.
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:28 pm to Dire Wolf
It benefits my home value because I live in a highly prized area with tours rolling through every hour. That said, turning neighborhoods into hotels just kinda sucks. Not a fan
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:29 pm to NIH
It is idiotic. I am now using AirBNB every time I travel, freeing up more dollars to spend on tourism.
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:31 pm to Dire Wolf
Her sign is stupid as frick
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:33 pm to NIH
I wish I had more upvotes.
They complain about gentrification causing property values to rise and try to stop it, while simulatenously complaining about blight and crime. Can’t have it both ways
They complain about gentrification causing property values to rise and try to stop it, while simulatenously complaining about blight and crime. Can’t have it both ways
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:36 pm to jimbeam
For me the gentrification isn't the issue. It's the loss of affordable housing in the city in walkable areas near amenities. Also, call me old fashioned but I think neighborhoods are generally better when filled with homeowners and not all renters and people in town for bachelor parties.
Folks that live in cities/areas no one cares to visit probably wouldn't understand.
Folks that live in cities/areas no one cares to visit probably wouldn't understand.
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:38 pm to Dire Wolf
The women I've rented from lived in the home for many years, she just found it more profitable to rent the home and purchased in Laplace.
She makes enough from rent to cover her new mortgage and pay bills, sounds like a sweet gig to me.
She makes enough from rent to cover her new mortgage and pay bills, sounds like a sweet gig to me.
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:39 pm to Dire Wolf
I’m torn on it. I’ve used it before in other cities and don’t give a shite about the ills of gentrification. But there’s no doubt it’s being abused and having a negative effect on neighborhoods in NOLA. There’s a huge, beautiful home on Gentilly Blvd that has a whole home permit, so it’s rented 90 days and is vacant for the rest of the year. Just kind of shitty if you ask me.
I’d be down for a homestead exemption requirement.
I’d be down for a homestead exemption requirement.
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:39 pm to Tigerdev
quote:
are generally better when filled with homeowners and not all renters and people in town for bachelor parties.
I agree owners are better than renters but those renters cant afford the houses. Thats why theyre not owners.
AirBnb isnt making housing costs skyrocket in a place like Nola. The lack of land and houses are doing that. Theres no place to expand the city
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:43 pm to Deactived
It's a number of factors to include shortages but there is no doubt that developers are driving up prices. I bought my place in the lower garden district 3 years ago and I was competing with cash offers from out of town developers. Some cash offers were being accepted before the houses even were open for viewing.
ETA: on the subject of rent have you looked at rent prices in nice neighborhoods in Nola? It would cost me 500 more per month to rent my place than to pay my mortgage
ETA: on the subject of rent have you looked at rent prices in nice neighborhoods in Nola? It would cost me 500 more per month to rent my place than to pay my mortgage
This post was edited on 4/16/18 at 8:48 pm
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:48 pm to chillygentilly
quote:
There’s a huge, beautiful home on Gentilly Blvd that has a whole home permit, so it’s rented 90 days and is vacant for the rest of the year.
Which one?
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:49 pm to wizziko
Lake side, right smack in the middle of Music and Arts
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:50 pm to chillygentilly
What’s that dude doing wearing a tiara in the background?
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:50 pm to Tigerdev
quote:
on the subject of rent have you looked at rent prices in nice neighborhoods in Nola? It would cost me 500 more per month to rent my place than to pay my mortgage
It’s one of the things that turned me off of moving to New Orleans vs moving back to Houston
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:51 pm to Tigerdev
A majority of ABNB in Nola are exclusively short term rentals which problematic for neighborhoods. There are blocks in the Bywater where more than half the houses are exclusively ABNB.
Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:51 pm to chillygentilly
quote:
Lake side, right smack in the middle of Music and Arts
Oh you mean this one. I thought that was like a bed and breakfast or something. There's a huge parking lot behind there too.

Posted on 4/16/18 at 8:51 pm to Dire Wolf
I like being able to use it, but I feel like it's a bad thing for the neighborhoods where it becomes overly prevalent.
It's become a big issue in a lot of the tourist cities in Europe. The historical areas are being emptied of residents and replaced with hotel guests. It's a good thing in the short term for the economy, but a terrible thing for the culture of a city. Without the people that created the culture that people travel to those destinations to experience, it all just becomes Disney World, a fake, artificial experience.
On the other hand, free market capitalism at work.
I am very split on the issue.
It's become a big issue in a lot of the tourist cities in Europe. The historical areas are being emptied of residents and replaced with hotel guests. It's a good thing in the short term for the economy, but a terrible thing for the culture of a city. Without the people that created the culture that people travel to those destinations to experience, it all just becomes Disney World, a fake, artificial experience.
On the other hand, free market capitalism at work.
I am very split on the issue.
This post was edited on 4/16/18 at 8:53 pm
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