25 years of public and private investment in Oklahoma City
About this study | 5 |
About the authors | 5 |
I. Introduction | 6 |
II. Three Rounds of MAPS Projects | 9 |
MAPS (Metropolitan Area Projects) | 16 |
MAPS for Kids | 19 |
MAPS 3 | 24 |
MAPS 3 Project Status | 24 |
Related City Development Efforts | 26 |
III. MAPS Impact (Goals, Geography and Measurement) | 28 |
Downtown Market | 28 |
IV. Downtown Study Area Demographic Change | 34 |
Population Trends | 34 |
Age and Sex Distribution | 38 |
Housing Units | 42 |
Housing Unit Growth – County Assessment Data | 42 |
Housing Unit Growth – Census ACS Data | 43 |
Racial Diversity | 52 |
Educational Attainment | 60 |
Household Income | 61 |
Disabilities of Residents | 64 |
Homelessness | 65 |
Downtown Workforce | 66 |
V. Downtown Study Area Economic Change | 70 |
Downtown Employment Trend | 70 |
Employment Growth - ZIP Codes | 82 |
VI. MAPS Investment – Public and Private | 85 |
MAPS Investment – MAPS, MAPS for Kids, MAPS 3 | 85 |
Total Public and Private Investment | 86 |
Private Investment and Property Market Valuations | 88 |
Downtown Office Market | 96 |
Downtown Residential Market | 100 |
Bricktown Property Valuations | 104 |
VII. Lodging, Tourism, and Cultural Attractions | 108 |
Downtown/Bricktown Lodging Sector | 108 |
Tourism | 111 |
VIII. Downtown Transportation | 114 |
Multimodal Transportation | 114 |
EMBARK Streetcar | 118 |
Changing Downtown Commuting Patterns | 120 |
Streetcar Area Economic Profile – Three-Block Impact Zone | 121 |
IX. Citizen Satisfaction | 127 |
X. Summary of MAPS Evaluation | 129 |
Key Policy Findings | 129 |
XI. Conclusion | 131 |
XII. Endnotes | 133 |
Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online