The chart raises lots of questions for me:
1. Is this by metro region or by city?
2. What level of census data is this, and do the census geographies cover both land & water (many of the census blocks actually extend into Lake Union, Portage Bay, Elliott Bay, etc.)
3. How are industrial, commercial, and park lands treated?
Seattle Transit Blog is an independent, award-winning publication covering transit and land use issues in Seattle and the Puget Sound since 2007.
About Us | Advertise
Wow, pretty damning that even Phoenix does better than Seattle on where the curve peaks.
The chart raises lots of questions for me:
1. Is this by metro region or by city?
2. What level of census data is this, and do the census geographies cover both land & water (many of the census blocks actually extend into Lake Union, Portage Bay, Elliott Bay, etc.)
3. How are industrial, commercial, and park lands treated?