1st Edition

Landmarks Preservation and the Property Tax Assessing Landmark Buildings for Real Taxation Purposes

By David Listokin Copyright 2012
    255 Pages
    by Routledge

    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    Historic preservation is an issue of growing importance and public commitment. Federal and state mechanisms have been established to identify and support historic buildings/sites, while local governments have been active in supporting and protecting historic resources. Communities across the country have established designation programs whereby individual buildings or districts of historical-architectural significance are accorded landmark status. Designation activity has been accompanied by growing interest in other local incentives/disincentives to the support of historic buildings. In this regard, the property tax is viewed as either a possible powerful drawback to or a catalyst of preservation. This study examines the relationship between historic preservation and the property tax, focusing on the question of how designated buildings should be assessed for real taxation purposes. Listokin focuses on New York City in considering the effects of historic status on property value and in evaluating assessment practices. But this book's findings are transferrable to other communities because the base conditions are similar. Many other cities have designation programs modeled on New York City's. In addition, New York's property-tax system and administrative processes resemble those found in communities across the nation. To enhance the transferability of this study's findings, Listokin refers to the national experience and literature, typically on a side-by-side basis with the New York City counterpart.

    One: Historic Preservation, Property Tax, and Landmark Assesssment: Background and Issues; Two: Landmark Designation and Property Value: Summary of the Literature; 3: Property-Tax Assessment Of Landmark Buildings: Prevailing Practice And Implications; 3-A: Assessment Of Landmark Properties: New York City Case Studies; 3-B: New York City Property-Tax Structure And Administration; Four: Policy and Procedural Recommendations for Assessing New York City Landmark Properties; ONE: Landmark Properties And The Property Tax: National Statutory Survey And Survey Of Practice; Two: Landmark Properties And The Property Tax: Annotated Bibliography

    Biography

    David Listokin