A 2009 presentation by Ira Goldstein that uses the MVA as a tool to understand how to identify and deploy resources to preserve and enhance Philadelphia’s vital, middle-market neighborhoods. Learn more>
In 2008, TRF completed an update to its Philadelphia MVA. Since the first Philadelphia MVA in 2001, TRF has periodically reevaluated changes in market data, tracking the effects of investment in specific neighborhoods. The updated MVAs have helped public and private investors understand changes in neighborhoods over time, allowing them to assess and refine their targeted investment stategies.
The first MVA was part of a huge effort by the City of Philadelphia to address decades of decline in the city. Known as the Neighborhood Transformation Initiative (NTI), the program was designed to renew and strengthen
The Philadelphia MVA was designed to discover whether there were indeed areas of the city that share common housing market and population characteristics. The picture that emerged served as a framework for the City’s plan of action. The Philadelphia MVA was able to reduce a vast amount of data on hundreds of thousands of properties and hundreds of areas down to a manageable, meaningful typology that helped