TOP 30 LARGEST CITIES
New York City – 42.57
Los Angeles – 20.34
Chicago – 45.42
Houston – 5.20
Philadelphia – 40.92
Phoenix – 1.67
San Antonio – 6.38
San Diego – 7.39
Dallas – 6.00
San Jose – 5.98
Detroit – 35.08
Indianapolis – 18.26
Jacksonville – 5.09
San Francisco – 54.35
Columbus, OH – 13.36
Austin – 2.47
Memphis – 8.81
Baltimore – 37.30
Fort Worth – 8.40
Charlotte – 3.54
El Paso – 5.27
Milwaukee – 41.26
Seattle – 31.45
Boston – 58.90
Denver – 22.85
Louisville – n/a
D.C. – 37.99
Nashville – 7.05
Las Vegas – 0.52
Portland, OR – 33.86
SELECT CITIES
New Orleans (2004) – 24.87
Kansas City, MO – 24.71
St. Louis – 61.76
Pittsburgh – 57.71
Cleveland – 57.59
-------------
Some warnings:
1) These are from the 2006 American Community Survey, not the decennial census.
2) The ACS is not highly accurate.
3) These numbers refer only to housing, not other types of buildings.
4) Some cities have experienced rapid growth as of late that sort of skews the numbers, even when they do have a large number of older houses. However, these are percentages, so it's only fair. I will try and do another list with post-2000 constructed housing pcts.
Interesting still that St. Louis has the highest percentage of any city on that list despite all of its high profile losses.
EDIT: I guess the thread title is misleading given that I did not put them in rank order. Ah well. You get the picture.
New York City – 42.57
Los Angeles – 20.34
Chicago – 45.42
Houston – 5.20
Philadelphia – 40.92
Phoenix – 1.67
San Antonio – 6.38
San Diego – 7.39
Dallas – 6.00
San Jose – 5.98
Detroit – 35.08
Indianapolis – 18.26
Jacksonville – 5.09
San Francisco – 54.35
Columbus, OH – 13.36
Austin – 2.47
Memphis – 8.81
Baltimore – 37.30
Fort Worth – 8.40
Charlotte – 3.54
El Paso – 5.27
Milwaukee – 41.26
Seattle – 31.45
Boston – 58.90
Denver – 22.85
Louisville – n/a
D.C. – 37.99
Nashville – 7.05
Las Vegas – 0.52
Portland, OR – 33.86
SELECT CITIES
New Orleans (2004) – 24.87
Kansas City, MO – 24.71
St. Louis – 61.76
Pittsburgh – 57.71
Cleveland – 57.59
-------------
Some warnings:
1) These are from the 2006 American Community Survey, not the decennial census.
2) The ACS is not highly accurate.
3) These numbers refer only to housing, not other types of buildings.
4) Some cities have experienced rapid growth as of late that sort of skews the numbers, even when they do have a large number of older houses. However, these are percentages, so it's only fair. I will try and do another list with post-2000 constructed housing pcts.
Interesting still that St. Louis has the highest percentage of any city on that list despite all of its high profile losses.
EDIT: I guess the thread title is misleading given that I did not put them in rank order. Ah well. You get the picture.







