America's housing market is broken, but the deep and structural problems can't be fixed with technology.
Why it matters: The U.S. is in desperate need of more high-quality rental housing. Homeownership works for many — and doesn't work at all for many others, who might not be ready to settle down or might not have the financial means.
The big picture: Venture capitalist Marc Andreessen has invested $350 million, his largest check ever, into Adam Neumann's new company, Flow.
- Andreessen's blog post lays out his investment thesis, that renting a home is "a soulless experience."
- The details of how Flow will work are still vague, but they're likely to include amenitization — bells and whistles for apartment renters — as well as some kind of financial upside.
What they're saying: "Someone who is bought in to where he lives cares more about where he lives," writes Andreessen. "Without this, apartments don’t generate any bond between person and place and without community, no bond between person to person."
- In New York, I've lived in both owned and rented apartments, and the community in my rental building was just as vibrant and tight-knit as anywhere I've owned.
- Neighborhoods characterized by very low home-ownership rates — think Harlem, in New York, or Hialeah, in Miami — often boast deep and lasting communities stretching across generations and decades.
Reality check: "Ownership per se doesn’t make you more invested in your community," Sam Chandan, the director of the NYU Stern Center for Real Estate Finance Research, tells Axios. "It makes you more invested in decisions...