13 June 2023

Data highlights the extent of gentrification in Canberra

| Lizzie Waymouth
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Brightly coloured roundabout

Braddon, Reid and the city are ‘becoming exclusive’, according to the AUO data. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

Data released by the Australian Urban Observatory has revealed that almost 90 per cent of Canberra’s suburbs are gentrified and at risk of becoming exclusive.

The AUO’s Precarity Index for Neighbourhoods and City Housing (PINCH) uses ABS census data from 2016-21 to assess the changing proportions of income groups and housing affordability and determine areas where lower and mixed-income households have been priced out by higher-income households or are at risk of being priced out.

“Rapid increases in housing costs over time are associated with ongoing gentrification while displacement results in fewer low or mixed-income households remaining in an area over time due to increasing housing affordability,” the AUO says.

Suburbs are divided into eight categories based on the level of gentrification, with one the lowest and eight the highest. The majority of Canberra is ranked at number six, ‘at risk of becoming exclusive’, with mostly higher-income households and rising housing costs.

map of canberra suburbs colour-coded in terms of level of gentrification

According to the PINCH, most of Canberra’s suburbs are ‘at risk of becoming exclusive’. Image: Australian Urban Observatory.

AUO director Associate Professor Melanie Davern, who sits within the Centre for Urban Research at RMIT University, told Region the data suggests “it’s probably been quite stably gentrified in Canberra for a long period of time now”.

“This is based on three major types of information,” she said: population groups according to income, housing costs and housing types, and an understanding of who the region is affordable to.

“You can see the majority of areas in Canberra at risk of becoming exclusive … So we know that going back to the definition, at risk of becoming exclusive [means] areas with mixed or high incomes … with marginal or rapid increases in housing costs.”

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Three areas – the city, Braddon and Reid – fell into the category of ‘becoming exclusive’, meaning that the median income has increased over the past five years, alongside rapid increases in housing costs and an absolute loss of low-income households.

Four suburbs – Gunghalin, Acton, Symonston and Oaks Estate – were classified as ‘low-income/susceptible to displacement’, with 55 per cent of the population low-income or mixed-income households as of 2021.

Kingston, Barton and Forrest were classed as areas that remained ‘exclusive’ to high-income households between 2016 and 2021.

The data can partly be explained by the fact that Canberra is a city with a generally higher socio-economic advantage and a larger number of people in higher-income positions. However, looking at the AUO’s other indicators, such as the distribution of the capital’s population employed as managers or professionals, there appears to be a difference between the inner and outer suburbs that is not reflected by the PINCH.

The AUO’s liveability index (below) particularly highlights that, while most suburbs of Canberra are becoming more expensive to live in, the standard of living across the capital region varies.

map of canberra

The AUO’s liveability index highlights differences in living standards across the ACT. Image: AUO.

“We know is there a divide that’s growing in Canberra in terms of the haves and have-nots,” Professor Davern said.

“The difficulty with planning is that we don’t go, ‘Maybe we should put more people in those well-serviced areas in the middle’. Because when we look at housing, we can see that people are coming in, particularly up in the [outer] north. They’re coming to that area, and they’re not going to have the same liveability as the people in those inner gentrified areas.”

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Similarly, looking at local employment – the number of people living and working in the same area – Professor Davern noticed that “at the suburb level, in the middle of Canberra and all that gentrified area, it’s really high. So, people are living and working in that same area”.

“But when I click up in the northern area, it’s completely red; it’s not present in the suburb of Gungahlin, [for example].”

Professor Davern says data is only one side of the story and that the AUO hopes its maps will inspire conversations at the community level.

“Data is only one source of information,” she said.

“We want policymakers and planners to have these conversations with community … We want people, even the general community, to be able to go back and go to the council and say, ‘What are you doing about this?'”

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bev hutchinson7:47 am 15 Jun 23

Wishful thinking I’d suggest. Clearly the author doesn’t know the difference between gentrification and bloody expensive. Nothing “gentrified” about this town, competitive and self indulgent yes..but not classy by any standard.

HiddenDragon8:12 pm 14 Jun 23

On the face of it, this research looks like a well-meaning statement of the bleeding obvious – housing costs in Canberra (as in just about every other part of Australia that people are even vaguely interested in living in) are going up much more quickly than incomes, and have been doing that for many years.

It will have value if it prompts government to remove the blinkers and face up to the worsening housing challenges faced by groups other than the usual demographics deemed to be deserving of consideration.

Alvin Santos2:20 pm 14 Jun 23

The ACT Government has admitted that mistakes were made with Gungahlin. Gungahlin was the first new area of Canberra planned after self-government. In Gungahlin a major of people live in low-density housing, on the edge of a city, far from where most work. We call this sprawl.
Sprawl is made visible by traffic congestion despite ever bigger roads. More roads result in more congestion. Commuting long distances to work and to reach services has a cost, as does car ownership. EVs do not change this. Studies have shown that good public transport can save people a lot of money. Local schools and services save more.
We know from urban planning that medium density housing close to the city centre and transport connections is less costly than living on the edge. The ACT Government has the job of providing services and infrastructure. This is cheaper to do when people live closer together and travel distances are shorter.
Essential services in the ACT are often located on edge of the ACT. Good examples are Hume, Fyshwick or Canberra airport office park (a recent addition). This is a structural problem and needs to be fix.
The ACT Government is also grappling with low-income housing and housing affordability. This discussion in the ACT Legislative Assembly will continue. The low-density models with single dwellings on the edge is unlikely to help. More middle density housing within easy reach of Civic would.
The renewal of the ACT planning system is changing the rules of the game. Now is a good time to engage in the process.

I wouldn’t call a 250 to 400 square meter block low density housing.

Gungahlin was supposed to be the antidote to sprawl – medium density suburbs relatively close to the city, served by public transport. And given they have abandoned further development of Tuggeranong, you imagine there will be further infill across Belconnen and Gungahlin. The ‘structural problem’ is built-in, because Canberra was designed when cars were seen as the answer to densification, so a clear change is required. As you say, people should engage.

I live 10 km from Civic. I would not call this “commuting a long distance” to work, especially considering that the tram is easily accessible.

ChrisinTurner1:42 pm 14 Jun 23

The AUO must be using faulty statistics if they show Reid as “exclusive”. Despite the ACT government’s best efforts to move all social housing away from the tram line, Reid still still has plenty of social housing.

Reid has less than half the amount of public and community housing than they had just five years ago, and not much more remains. Fewer than a hundred dwellings are left and property developers are rubbing their hands together every time they walk past.

Based on every other housing measure, Reid’s just about as ‘exclusive’ a Suburb as you can get (and getting more exclusive with every new development).

John Schwazer12:31 pm 14 Jun 23

The only ones surprised about this are those who – in supporting all their woke, social justice, commie, new age crap – don’t understand that it’s the monopoly capitalists who are pushing these causes in the first place, for the purpose of erasing all legitimate boundaries in the world, so that they can ride roughshod over everything and everyone, taking possession of things that aren’t theirs – while the useful ‘you-know-whats’ cheer them on, all the while peeing and moaning about their once trendy and woke neighbourhoods being made exclusive, with a view to one day making them 15 minute neighbourhoods in smart cities.

A word to the wise: if you don’t want this utter BS to happen, don’t support the monopoly capitalists/globalists/technocrats, i.e., don’t support their revolution against legitimate boundaries. Failing to take heed will only mean that you’ll eventually be betrayed (in more obvious ways) – like now – to say nothing of the cost of living crisis that’s just beginning (thanks to the zillionaire globalists who influence governments and then nations to do their bidding).

And if you don’t believe me, just watch from now on and see how every major talking point in the news and society never really results in many people’s living standards improving – despite the false promises coming from the politicians’ lying mouths – but always lead only to Australia being more and more divided, patriotism waning, and more and more powers for the governments (and their bosses, the zillionaire globalists).

I’m sorry, if you think all the big money is on one side of the argument, you need to read up on things more. You might also want to thank all the woke social justice types for democracy, weekends, the 40-hour week, universal education, healthcare, etc.

Woke is not about social justice. Woke is all about greed and certain well-off groups demanding money. Woke = theft

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