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Statements

Subject Item
dbr:100_percent_corner
rdfs:label
100 percent corner
rdfs:comment
The 100 percent corner is the busiest area in a city. Often it is a crossroads of several major streets, and the place with the highest land value and/or where grid plan numbering is based upon. The term is also used for the place for ideal real estate projects, sometimes considered the intersection of two highways in a suburban area. The terms "hundred percent location", "hundred percent corner", or "peak land value intersection" may also be used.
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n13:Columbus_2020-06-04_protests_02.jpg
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dbc:Urban_studies_and_planning_terminology dbc:Real_estate_terminology
dbo:wikiPageID
66166139
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
1088750490
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbr:Intersection_(road) dbr:Syracuse,_New_York dbr:Louisville,_Kentucky n7:Columbus_2020-06-04_protests_02.jpg dbc:Real_estate_terminology dbr:City_centre dbr:New_Haven,_Connecticut dbr:Broad_Street_(Columbus,_Ohio) dbc:Urban_studies_and_planning_terminology dbr:Columbus,_Ohio dbr:Grid_plan
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dbo:abstract
The 100 percent corner is the busiest area in a city. Often it is a crossroads of several major streets, and the place with the highest land value and/or where grid plan numbering is based upon. The term is also used for the place for ideal real estate projects, sometimes considered the intersection of two highways in a suburban area. The terms "hundred percent location", "hundred percent corner", or "peak land value intersection" may also be used. The 100 percent corner is used in research as part of a method to determine a city's downtown area, by measuring a radius (e.g. one mile) from the central intersection. Examples * Broad and High Streets in Columbus, Ohio * Fayette Street and South Salina Street in Syracuse, New York * Fourth and Muhammad Ali Boulevard in Louisville, Kentucky * Church and Chapel Streets in New Haven, Connecticut
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wikipedia-en:100_percent_corner?oldid=1088750490&ns=0
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4001
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wikipedia-en:100_percent_corner