The site looks less than heavily useful to me. I clicked on my neighborhood and surrounding ones, and according to the site, people in my neighborhood have the same median household income as the ritzy neighbohood a few miles away where they keep horses and have slaves’ quarters.
Looking at Manhattan, it’s very, very green. Heh. Some interesting little anomalies though–e.g., the “block” of the map that includes Times Square is at the very bottom of their scale. Not many people live in that area–my guess is that it must be getting skewed by some old buildings with too many rent-controlled tenants to develop over.
You can also see that the Lower East Side remains relatively poor even now. Harlem and the Bronx are striking when compared to Manhattan, or even Queens/Brooklyn. On the other side of the income distribution, the map tends to flatten things out–I’d like one that didn’t mash everything above $112K or so into one color so that I could take a close look at the Upper West Side, for example.
Huh, good point. I guess some of these boundaries are a bit big to be a neighborhood (especially regarding the small towns, where a tract takes up the whole town)
looking at the map of portland, OR…i can’t figure out what the point of this website is. besides exact numbers i could have drawn the same outlines for income areas in this city.
The rich people in my town are invisible, since the census tract that has all the big mansions and such also has a university with dormitories full of penniless students.
You can also tell where the housing projects are. That was the most striking thing about my area, the drastic difference between the projects and the immediately adjacent areas. In the block by block view I can find places where one really high end apartment building is skewing the block upwards.
I don’t see any useful data here. My neighborhood is a color that falls between $23,449 and $92,476. I see no breakdown beyond the highest and lowest ranges no matter how deep I drill. Color changes yes, but no indication what that color signifies except that it’s between the two extremes.
I could go to Zillow and get better data than this.
Are you clicking on the neighborhood itself? My neighborhood has the following numbers:
Median household income: $48,456.00 (+/- $19,444.00).
Which is still a bit of a range, but not the wide rage you’re seeing. Are you by any chance looking at the state median household income in the lower right corner? There I see numbers that say 23,000-106,500 or more, but that is a scale for the colors, with the red end being 23,000 and the green end representing 106,500.
I’ve zoomed down from state to practically house level. No numbers.
Yes, I’m seeing the state median income and the color scale; that’s all I have. I am neither red nor dark green, and those are the only colors for which a value is given.
No, but I suspect I live in one of the richer general areas of the country (Redmond WA, home of Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Boeing, etc. etc.), so pretty much everything’s yellow or green (there’s no red or pinks visible on the map at my zoom level), which is the same color scheme used by the underlying map without the overlay.
Doesn’t matter. Other folks are finding it useful, and the fiscal cliff thing has kept Congress from voting on my “all web sites have to be customized to TimeWinder’s desires” bill, even though it’s a shoe-in.
Here is a page from the New York Times website that provides detailed maps about household income, changes in income, race and ethnicity, home values and educational achievement. This data is from the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey data from 2005-2009.