PHILADELPHIA — A neighborhood coffee shop on the walk to work. A gym on the way home. A theater or concert venue a few blocks away. An assortment of restaurants and bars ready to satisfy changing moods.
Potential home buyers evaluate the characteristics of properties — numbers of bedrooms and bathrooms, parking, prices — but often just as important are the convenience and the sense of community that a neighborhood's shops, restaurants and entertainment bring. And right now, these businesses are feeling the financial sting of the coronavirus pandemic.
The fate of residential real estate in certain city neighborhoods could be linked to the fate of small businesses, just as those businesses have helped raise interest in those neighborhoods, said Philadelphia Realtor Jamie McFadden, of Team Whetzel at Kurfiss Sotheby's International Realty.
"We know that the economic powerhouses of our small little neighborhoods are our amazing, iconic local restaurants" and other businesses, he said. "They drive the success of our neighborhoods. They help drive the value of our homes."
Too many vacant storefronts can signal to potential home buyers or renters that the community as a whole is not thriving.
But businesses are struggling and not all of them will survive. A third of small and midsize businesses that are closed because of the coronavirus pandemic don't think they will reopen, according to a Facebook survey last month of 86,000 owners, managers and employees. A Harvard Business School study in April found that nearly two-thirds of small businesses say they will likely have to close permanently by the end of the year if pandemic restrictions continue.
During and after the Great Recession, Philadelphia's small and midsize businesses had more trouble paying their bills and had less cash on hand than their peers in other cities, including New York, Washington, Baltimore and Boston, according to an analysis by the Pew Charitable Trusts and Drexel University professors published in April.
Economic growth and real estate growth go hand-in-hand, said Stephanie Biello, president of the Greater Philadelphia Association of Realtors.