Study: Lake water quality affects property values
BEMIDJI (AP) -- A study of lakes in north-central Minnesota shows that clear water can boost
the value of lakeshore property, giving property owners and elected officials a new reason
to think about land-use and development issues.
Researchers at Bemidji State University calculated how much property values would rise or fall
on 37 lakes if water clarity improved or worsened.
They examined 1,205 residential property sales from 1996 to 2001 on lakes in the upper Mississippi
River watershed. The land values were compared to water quality data for those lakes.
"We concluded that water clarity is very significantly related to the price per foot of lakeshore,
" said Charlie Parson, a geography professor and co-author of the study. "We have enough
lakes and enough parcels to establish that this is a real relationship."
Water clarity, a measure of how deep you can see into a lake, can be affected by pollution, erosion
and other factors, such as the removal of shore vegetation.
Parson and Patrick Welle, a professor of economics and environmental studies, projected how property
values could change if water clarity increases or decreases.
Leech Lake, for example, is clear to a depth of about 10 feet. The study said that if the water got
clearer -- so you could see down another 3 feet -- a lake property's value would rise by $423 for
each foot of frontage. For a 40-foot lakefront lot, that amounts to nearly a $17,000 gain in value.
If the lake's clarity is reduced by more than 3 feet, the study said, it would cut values by $594
per frontage foot.
Property values on other lakes would be less dramatically affected by changes in water quality.
Ten Mile Lake in Cass County, which is clear to nearly 22 feet, would see shore frontage rise an
estimated $9 per foot if its water became clearer. Land values would drop by about $11 per foot if
the lake lost more than 3 feet of clarity.
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