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Resurgent landlordism in a student city: urban dynamics of private rental growth

Cody HochstenbachUrban Geographies, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, NetherlandsBarend WindFaculty of Spatial Sciences, University of Groningen, Groningen, NetherlandsRowan ArundelUrban Geographies, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
2020en
ABI

Abstract

Many countries have seen a remarkable revival of private-rental housing markets in recent years. Academic literature so far has focused on theorizing the political-economic drivers of reinvestment in the tenure or on charting aggregate trends. This paper adds to these literatures in several ways based on a fine-grained analysis of housing market transformations in Groningen, a medium-sized university city in The Netherlands. First, we reveal the variegated trajectories through which private-rental growth materializes on the ground and untangle the role of different types of landlords. While small-scale private landlords remain dominant, we find a clear and important trend toward property concentration. Second, we highlight variations in spatial investment strategies across landlord types. Third, we reveal how contemporary dynamics of increased landlordism play out in a medium-sized city, embedded in a context of national private rental resurgence and local housing market pressures of a growing student city.

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