Real Estate
Bayside Rents Drop As Rents Rise In Elmhurst, Corona: Study
The 2021 study shows disparities between wealthy, mostly white areas where rents dropped, and areas hard-hit by COVID where rents rose.

BAYSIDE, QUEENS — Rents in New York City hit record lows during the first quarter of 2021, according to a new study, and while rents dropped in Bayside they rose in some central Queens neighborhoods, highlighting disparities in the borough.
The report, released by StreetEasy last Friday found that NYC rents, which have been precipitously dropping throughout the pandemic, hit record lows across the city during the past few months, including in Queens where rents dropped below $2,000 for the first time in eight years.
According to the study's data, the rents in the primarily white, wealthy neighborhood of Bayside dropped by 8.1 percent year-over-year.
Find out what's happening in Bayside-Douglastonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
This drop is in contrast to increases in rents in some central Queens neighborhoods hard-hit by the pandemic, including East Elmhurst and North Corona, where rents grew by 4.5 percent and 16.7 percent, respectively.
The rise in North Corona is the largest percentage point increase in rent across the entirety of NYC, according to the study.
Find out what's happening in Bayside-Douglastonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Matthew Murphy, Executive Director of the NYU Furman Center attributes this trend — which has persisted in Queens, and the city at large amid the pandemic — to differences in the opportunity for mobility that high- and low-income New Yorkers have.
He explained in a written statement to Patch that during the past year many "renter households with the resources relocated" compared to lower-income households who weren't able to move.
Those lower-income households then found themselves in neighborhoods where "listed rents have increased" because "demand has remained high," he explained, adding that "given this segmentation, low-income households are not seeing the benefit of rent decreases."
And, it's not just Bayside and central Queens where this segmented rent pattern has happened: Other lower-income areas of Queens predominantly populated by people of color, like Hollis, saw rent increases by as much as 13.4 percent — or no rent changes at all, in the case of Rosedale, St. Albans, and South Jamaica — whereas rents rents fell precipitously in high-income neighborhoods like Astoria and Long Island City.
Although StreetEasy economists speculate in the study that the city's rent decreases won't last forever, for Dr. Donald Tricarico, a professor of urban studies and sociology at Queensborough Community College in Bayside, the pattern of segmented rent is a trend that will persist since "status has implications for mobility."
"The elite residents of the city have choices that lower income, minority New Yorkers don't have," he said.
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