How an NYC Suburb Is Keeping Rents Down

纽约郊区如何保持租金稳定

The Journal.

2025-08-21

18 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

When New Rochelle, NY was faced with a declining population and economy, it set out on a building spree. A decade into the effort, the city – which sits just north of New York City – actually managed to keep rents down, bucking a nationwide trend. WSJ’s Rebecca Picciotto shares how New Rochelle navigated red tape and some community opposition to build thousands of new housing units. Jessica Mendoza hosts. Further Listening:- Is NYC’s Mayoral Race All About Rent? - The Rise of the YimbysSign up for WSJ’s free What’s News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • The rising cost of housing is crushing many Americans.

  • And for renters in big metro areas, it's been getting worse.

  • Like in New York City, where the median rent has reached almost $3,500 a month.

  • But just north of the city, beyond its expensive brownstones and six-floor walk-ups,

  • there's a suburb of about $85,000 that's found a way to keep rent steady.

  • New Rochelle.

  • The New Rochelle rental market is one of the kind of bastions of relative affordability in the notoriously expensive New York City metro area.

  • That's our colleague Rebecca Picciotto.

  • She covers real estate.

  • She says that rents in New York City are up 26 percent since 2020.

  • But in New Rochelle, rents have climbed just 1.6 percent in the same period.

  • So Rebecca went to New Rochelle to try to understand why.

  • When you get off the train in New Rochelle, you see construction sites sort of everywhere.

  • You can see kind of the new supply coming on, you know, before your very eyes.

  • These empty lots with cranes and the emerging skyline of New Rochelle is very visible.

  • So what does that tell you about why the rents are the way they are in New Rochelle?

  • It's not a super magic secret formula.

  • They built more housing, and as a result, as that new supply came online, rents fell.

  • It sounds simple,

  • but as it's become a little bit easier said than done in many cities across the country,