Taxpayer (building)

A photo of taxpayer buildings in Boston, with streetcar tracks in the foreground.
Examples of commercial taxpayer buildings in Boston

In US real estate, urban planning, and especially firefighting, a taxpayer refers to a small one or two story building built to cover the owner's annual property tax assessed for owning a parcel of land.[1] Taxpayers are most commonly mixed use structures with commercial occupancies on the first floor and residential use above. Such a building is usually constructed with the hope that it can soon be redeveloped into a larger building capable of generating more revenue, or simply to hold a parcel of land along a new road or especially a streetcar line while waiting for value to appreciate. The building style was generally replaced with strip malls as the automobile became dominant in the mid 20th Century.[2]

  1. ^ "SOP Fires in Taxpayers" (PDF). www.firesops.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2015-04-22.
  2. ^ "Taxpayers and Strip Malls: Construction and Tactics". www.fireengineering.com. Retrieved 2015-04-23.

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