Over the past two decades, no firm or institution in America has conducted more analyses of the economic impacts of historic preservation than has PlaceEconomics. Beginning in Virginia in 1995 with the first statewide study of the impacts of preservation, we have prepared impact analyses in over a dozen states. Recently, we have expanded the types of studies we are able to provide to include analysis of affordable housing, deconstruction, and resiliency. Find our studies below.

March 2010
The Delaware Historic Preservation Tax Credit Program: Good for the Economy, Good for the Environment, Good for Delaware’s Future
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August 2005
The Economics of Historic Preservation: A Community Leader’s Guide
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November 2003
The Importance of Downtown in the 21st Century
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October 2003
Historic Preservation and Affordable Housing: The Missed Connection
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Planning for the Future, Using the Past: The Role of Historic Preservation in Building Tomorrow’s Washington, DC
September 2003
Planning for the Future, Using the Past: The Role of Historic Preservation in Building Tomorrow’s Washington, DC
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August 2003
Planning for the Future, Using the Past The Role of Historic Preservation in Building Tomorrow’s Washington, DC
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August 2002
The (Economic) Value of National Register Listing
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August 2001
New York: Profiting Through Preservation
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August 1999
Culture, Historic Preservation and Economic Development in the 21st Century
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August 1994
The Economic Effect of National Register Listing
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