Real Estate Image Analysis: A Literature Review

2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 269-300
Author(s):  
David Koch ◽  
Miroslav Despotovic ◽  
Sascha Leiber ◽  
Muntaha Sakeena ◽  
Mario Döller ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (20) ◽  
pp. 11443
Author(s):  
Martyna Joanna Surma ◽  
Richard Joseph Nunes ◽  
Caroline Rook ◽  
Angela Loder

This article has aimed to better understand employee engagement in a post-COVID-19 workplace ecosystem. We identified a knowledge gap in the relationship between employee engagement and the physical workplace environment through an interdisciplinary literature review. We subsequently tested this gap by comparing employee engagement metrics proposed by leading academics in the field of organisational psychology with a sample of commonly used real estate industry approaches to monitoring workplace design/management. We focused specifically on industry-projected post-COVID-19 workplace ecosystem scenarios, and the results suggest that traditional employee engagement metrics and industry approaches to monitoring workplace design and management do not fully reflect the recent shift to hybrid work patterns. We shed light on the implications that this can have on our existing knowledge of “sustainable” property markets in a wider city context.


2017 ◽  
pp. 97-117
Author(s):  
Guillermo Villegas ◽  
Juan Guillermo Villegas

Este artículo se deriva de un proyecto investigativo que apunta al análisis del estado del arte sobre la gentrificación urbana en Colombia. La sistematización de investigaciones y artículos afines al desplazamiento, acompañada de un marco de referencia soportado en la gentrificación, la renta diferencial –rent gap- y el acoso –mobbing- inmobiliario, ayudaron a la reinterpretación de tales investigaciones para concluir de éstas el uso de un mecanismo para desplazar. Concretamente se puntualiza en lo sucedido en barrios del centro de Bogotá, desde la renovación urbana en Santa Bárbara (1980), calificada como inmoral, hasta las intervenciones en Santa Inés -El cartucho- (1998) y en el Voto Nacional -El Bronx- (2016), para develar la instrumentalización de ciertos seres humanos en la aplicación estrategias de acoso inmobiliario para desplazar disimuladamente, desvalorizar propiedades, especular con el suelo y de paso alentar la gentrificación. ABSTRACTThis paper is derived from a research project seeking to analyze the state of the art on urban gentrification in Colombia. A systematic literature review around displacement was carried out accompanied by a reference framework on gentrification, differential rent -rent gap– and real estate “mobbing”, which lead to a reinterpretation of such research works to conclude from these the use of a mechanism for displacement. Specifically, this study focuses on the experiences in neighborhoods in Bogota’s downtown; from the urban renewal in Santa Barbara (1980) qualified as immoral, to the interventions in Santa Inés -El Cartucho- (1998) and in Voto Nacional - El Bronx- (2016), whereupon, it was revealed a human instrumentation in the deployment of real estate “mobbing”, towards disguising displacement, devaluating properties, speculating with land and, in the meantime, encouraging gentrification.Keywords: Gentrification, rent gap, real estate mobbing 


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Koch ◽  
Matthias Zeppelzauer ◽  
Mario Döller ◽  
Miroslav Despotovic

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (24) ◽  
pp. 7006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daikun Wang ◽  
Victor Jing Li

With the increasing volume and active transaction of real estate properties, mass appraisal has been widely adopted in many countries for different purposes, including assessment of property tax. In this paper, 104 papers are selected for the systematic literature review of mass appraisal models and methods from 2000 to 2018. The review focuses on the application trend and classification of mass appraisal and highlights a 3I-trend, namely AI-Based model, GIS-Based model and MIX-Based model. The characteristics of different mass appraisal models are analyzed and compared. Finally, the future trend of mass appraisal based on model perspective is defined as “mass appraisal 2.0”: mass appraisal is the appraisal procedure of model establishment, analysis and test of group of properties as of a given date, combined with artificial intelligence, geo-information systems, and mixed methods, to better model the real estate value of non-spatial and spatial data.


2020 ◽  
Vol Vol. 36 (No. 2) ◽  
pp. 85-90
Author(s):  
Valentinas Navickas ◽  
Tomas Skripkiunas

The position of architecture between market goods and public goods is addressed in this study. A transition of architectural objects of built environment from market goods towards public or nonmarket goods is presented in literature review. The real estate market value is highly influenced by concepts of externalities and public goods, therefore being highly spatially dependent and making the process of the real estate valuation more complex. The internalization of these externalities and public goods is impossible because of the nature of public space in the city. The concept of value and different types of value, like exchange, use, image, social, environmental, cultural value, are also presented in literature review. These different types of value are transferred to value in exchange when estimating market value. The aim of research is to calculate the amount of the real estate market value that is influenced by externalities, public or nonmarket goods. The process of value transfers between market and public is also discussed in this study. In the research part prices of similar apartments measure the coefficient of variance. Newly constructed apartment buildings with partial finishing interior within city boundaries are selected expecting their price to vary only because of different amount of externalities and public goods available inside district/region of selected building or provided by the actual building itself. The results show that up to 29% of the real estate market value is influenced by public or nonmarket goods. Implications of further research suggest controlling for market segmentation and architectural quality variables


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.S.D. Abeysinghe ◽  
◽  
S. Senaratne ◽  
A.K. Andaraweera ◽  
◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (3) ◽  
pp. 17-30
Author(s):  
Tom Kauko

Abstract While being largely confined to different realms, planning and real estate also have a symbiotic relation. The logic of this relation varies in time and space, which makes the analysis of the balance between the two fields challenging. When we define these actions as institutions, potentially powerful analytic tools become available. This critical literature review examines some of the most relevant of them, in various specific institutional arenas, including the impact of planning on property markets and prices. The aim is to examine the role of institutions at the interface of urban planning and real estate. In other words, to see what kind of institutional effects are identifiable, whenever planning and property interests overlap. The conclusions suggest that a change in the urban fabric is likely to impact the possibility to use a site, and thereby also the value of land and built property.


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