Not sure that these are markers of gentrifying neighborhoods -- just as an example, the big red area on your Austin map next to the University of Texas is largely student housing, and has always been this way: students have little to no income, often have roommates, and the parking policies of the university ensure that many students have few options other than to live near campus.<p>Likewise, the map of Philadelphia misses most of south Philadelphia, an area that is gentrifying extremely quickly with several hundred million dollar condo developments set to go up in the middle of the ghetto.<p>Interesting statistics, but I don't know that the conclusions that the authors are trying to draw are valid.
Take a look at Seattle: <a href="https://kwelia.com/maps/cbsa_census_tract?cbsa=Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue,%20WA" rel="nofollow">https://kwelia.com/maps/cbsa_census_tract?cbsa=Seattle-Tacom...</a>
The Tampa Bay data has a weird outlier that it making the map kind of useless:<p><a href="https://kwelia.com/maps/cbsa_census_tract?cbsa=Tampa-St.%20Petersburg-Clearwater,%20FL#" rel="nofollow">https://kwelia.com/maps/cbsa_census_tract?cbsa=Tampa-St.%20P...</a><p>Notice the one red spot at the top level, and everything else falling within the first 3 levels, which are 30% each. If the data is correct, perhaps the algorithm to pick the scaling factors could be improved to ignore outliers at the top and bottom?
These maps are really interesting, although I agree that whether they are actually measuring gentrification is debateable.<p>I would have found the site a lot easier to use if there were a big map view of the whole country where you could select from the supported regions. I was trying to see Mountain View, and finding the right setting in the drop down menu took a while (Mountain View and Los Altos are lumped in with "San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara" if anyone else is looking).
Another sign of gentrification: I'm seeing all these ad signs that they're buying cheap houses. These ads are getting more and more now. I say this is a sign because there are poor people that wants to move out, and others sees it as opportunity to flip the house for profit.
American Community Survey data is practically valueless. There, I said it. Symbolically, it may be interesting. When applied to cases like this, the conclusions one can draw are largely untenable.