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    Home»Picture»Climate Risk as Property Data

    Climate Risk as Property Data

    Jamaica Homes NewsBy Jamaica Homes NewsJanuary 4, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Climate Risk as Property Data
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    He stands at elevation overlooking a coastal edge where sea, road, and housing compress into a single vulnerable strip, his attention fixed not on the horizon but on the information layered over it. The Jamaican man holds his phone steady, reading resilience metrics that now sit alongside the familiar forms of roofs, roads, and traffic, turning landscape into quantified exposure. The house below is rendered twice: once as architecture—timber, roof pitch, setback—and again as data, marked by storm surge height, flood probability, and heat performance. The sea is active, unsettled, pressing against the shoreline, while inland the city rises denser and more vertical, signalling where capital has historically fled from risk. Infrastructure is exposed here, the roadway dipping toward water, mobility and vulnerability sharing the same corridor. This is not alarmism but normalised assessment, where climate is no longer an abstract future threat but a present condition priced into property decisions. Power appears quietly, residing in the ability to read risk clearly rather than deny it. Jamaica is present as coastline, settlement, and consequence, its built environment now inseparable from environmental calculation.

    Year: 2040
    Author: Jamaica Homes
    Type: Coastal Urban Environment
    Key Visual Elements: coastal residential structure · storm surge data overlays · mobile resilience interface · arterial roadway · high-density skyline
    Category: Built Environment
    Location: Coastal Kingston, Jamaica

    Climate has entered the property ledger.

    Conceptual visual interpretation
    © Jamaica Homes 2040
    jamaica-homes.com · All rights reserved
    #JamaicaHomes #ClimateAndHousing #BuiltEnvironment

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    Wages Standing Still, Rents Moving Fast: Jamaica’s Housing Affordability Crisis Enters a New Phase

    By Jamaica Homes NewsJuly 7, 20260

    Rents consuming nearly 58% of average take-home pay, a 150,000-unit housing deficit and a Bank of Jamaica rate that refuses to move — our July 2026 review maps the forces squeezing Jamaica’s renters and first-time buyers and asks what relief, if any, is on the horizon.

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