The economics of displacement
Potential Environmental and Social costs
of the Magic City innovation district
Fact Sheet | Technical Report
The Magic City Innovation District (“Magic City”) is a seventeen-acre development slated to be built in the Little Haiti neighborhood of Miami. While the development may attract additional investment and benefits for new residents and businesses that move to the area, there is growing concern about the potential negative environmental and social impacts of the project, including economic displacement of residents who have historically resided and worked in Little Haiti, the majority of whom are low-income families of color. Without taking the time to establish a complete picture of the project’s environmental and social costs and benefits, Magic City Innovation District runs the risk of perpetuating economic and racial inequities across Miami communities and contributing to unsustainable development practices that threaten Miami’s long-term resilience.
Using the Magic City Innovation District and Little Haiti as a case study, this project examines and raises awareness of the potential environmental and social costs of land use and economic changes associated with re-zoning and urban development. While gentrification of neighborhoods like Little Haiti generate economic benefits for developers and many homeowners and businesses, the costs incurred by low-income communities of color in the form of relocation, increased exposure to climate hazards, and disrupted social networks, are significant and measurable.
Linking development
with Economic, social, and environmental costs
Large, mixed-use development projects such as the Magic City project can generate significant changes to land use and local economic conditions. Land-use changes, such as converting existing trees and lawn to sidewalks and parking lots, replacing one- or two- story buildings with multi-floor buildings, and increasing residential density, all generate a range of environmental impacts. Economic changes such as rising property costs can lead to economic displacement of lower-income households, which can result in long-lasting financial costs for households. As the impacts of sea-level rise intensify and developers look to higher ground to build projects, Miami’s low-income communities of color are at risk of displacement, particularly to climate-vulnerable neighborhoods.
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IMPACT
Little Haiti residents rally for a more ‘inclusive’ development ahead of Magic City Vote. | Miami Herald
Miami's Magic City Innovation District Could Displace 3,000+ Little Haiti Households, Study Says | Daily Business Review
A Giant Little Haiti Project is Met with Cautious Approval | Star Tribune, September 2019
Page, R., Madsen, T., Mojica, J., Kerr, N., Armistead, C. 2019. Potential Environmental and Social Costs of the Magic City Innovation District: Technical Summary.
Prepared for Community Justice Project, Prepared by Earth Economics. Funding provided by the Kresge Foundation.
Key Words: Community Based Organizations, Displacement, Economic Analysis, Miami, Little Haiti, Magic City, Florida, Rebecca Page