New Rutgers Regional Report: A retrospective and prospective of NJ’s rental housing market

November 14, 2012

A new Rutgers Regional Report, “The Evolving Rental Housing Market in New Jersey: Retrospective and Prospective,” authored by James W. Hughes, dean of Rutgers University’s Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, and Joseph J. Seneca, university professor and economist at the Bloustein School, examines the long-term history of rental housing in New Jersey as well as the impact of the recent housing bust and global credit crisis on rental markets.

New Jersey’s rental housing market has been profoundly influenced by both demographic and economic factors, according to the report. The early rental markets in the state were responses to the large immigration waves of the 1900s and a growing urban industrial economy. Subsequently, an emerging middle class   from the earliest three decades of the 20th century encouraged the development of large multifamily structures, ending with the Great Depression.

The Post-Great Depression/World War II era saw large numbers of returning veterans and the emergence of garden apartments.  As the economy stabilized and incomes grew, more upscale mid- and high-rise complexes emerged, serving more affluent renters. The baby boom generation (1946-1964) that transformed New Jersey demographics, and continues to do so, gave rise to the second wave of postwar garden apartments and other rental units in the late 1960s with much more suburban focus.  This is the source of the largest share of New Jersey’s current rental inventory (29.5 percent).

Municipal growth control policies as well as a low-birth period led to a significant slowing of additions to rental capacity in the 1980s and 1990s.  Much of the new construction during this period was the development of suburban offices along transportation corridors for a young, white-collar workforce. The first decade of the new millennium continued to see the slow development of new rental properties, but demographic forces began to exert lifestyle shifts as the baby-boom echo generation (1976-1994) entered the housing market and rental demand emphasized a more urban lifestyle.

A detailed examination of the evolution of the state’s rental housing with supporting data is available at:https://backup.bloustein.rutgers.edu/reports/rrr/RRRNov12.pdf

To interview the report’s authors, contact James W. Hughes,jwhughes@rutgers.edu, 848-932-2828 or Joseph J. Seneca,seneca@rutgers.edu, 848-932-2818

 

Recent Posts

Mi Shih Recognized with GPEIG Best Journal Article Award

Mi Shih, Ph.D., Associate Professor and director of the Urban Planning and Policy Development Program, was recognized with the Global Planning Educators’ Interest Group’s (GPEIG) 2025 award for the best journal article. The award honors outstanding, peer-reviewed...

Building Capacity to Support New Jersey Autism Professionals

Building Capacity to Support New Jersey Autism Professionals: A Workforce Study and Multi-state Comparative Landscape of Policies and Practices Daniel Rosario, Josephine O’Grady, Lily McFarland, Peter Walter, Ryne Kremer, Sean Nguyen, and Wun-cian Lin for Autism New...

Dr. Rushing Talks About AI for Sickle Cell and Beyond

Dr. Melinda Rushing recently appeared on the podcast Zora Talks. In this podcast, Dr. Rushing breaks down what sickle cell really is, why it disproportionately affects people of color, and how her team is developing a new approach called Clinically Guided AI to...

NJSPL: Increasing Enrollment of Paid Family Leave

The Increasing Enrollment of Paid Family Leave for Parents in the U.S. Over the past 10 years, many U.S. states have implemented mandatory paid family leave policies to help address the lack of such policy on the national level. In this post, we examine how paid...