Politics & Government
How Norristown's Housing Development Growth Compares To Montgomery County
How fast are Limerick and Royersford growing? Here are the stats comparing new development in the area compared to the rest of the county.

NORRISTOWN, PA — Montgomery County is in the building homes business, and business is booming. In 2016, more homes were built in the county than have been built in any other year in the last ten.
Salford saw the greatest percentage increase in homes built since 2011, at 25.5 percent. They were followed by New Hanover at 17 percent, Upper Hanover at 16 percent, Conshohocken at 12 percent, and Upper Providence at 11.1 percent.
In Norristown, there was a 1.6 percent increase since 2011, with 157 new units built in 2016.
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Meanwhile, countywide, a total of 2,219 housing units were built last year, marking a 16 percent increase from 2011, county officials said. It also marks an increase of more than 300 from 2015, in which 1,915 new units were built.
The numbers were released in a pair of new reports issued by the Montgomery County Planning Commission at a recent Board of Commissioners Meeting.
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“These substantial increases indicate a strong housing market and growing economy in Montgomery County,” Val Arkoosh, Chair of the Montgomery County Board of Commissioners, said in a statement. “Businesses want to invest and grow here and with the booming apartment market millennials are moving here.”
Here's how several local municipalities compared:
- Abington: 0.6 percent
- Ambler: 2.2 percent
- Bridgeport: 1 percent
- Bryn Athyn: 2.4 percent
- Cheltenham: 1.9 percent
- Collegeville: 1.8 percent
- Conshohocken: 12.1 percent
- Douglass: 4.0 percent
- East Greenville: 0 percent
- East Norriton: 3.4 percent
- Franconia: 1.6 percent
- Green Lane: 0 percent
- Hatboro: 9.8 percent
- Hatfield Borough: 1.2 percent
- Hatfield Township: 2.1 percent
- Horsham: 1.3 percent
- Jenkintown: 0.5 percent
- Lansdale: 3.1 percent
- Limerick: 5.2 percent
- Lower Frederick: 0.6 percent
- Lower Gwynedd: 1.4 percent
- Lower Merion: 2.5 percent
- Lower Moreland: 3.1 percent
- Lower Pottsgrove: 0.7 percent
- Lower Providence: 2.4 percent
- Lower Salford: 4.7 percent
- Marlborough: 5.5 percent
- Montgomery: 5.6 percent
- Narberth: 0.8 percent
- New Hanover: 17.9 percent
- Norristown: 1.6 percent
- North Wales: 0.7 percent
- Pennsburg: 0.87 percent
- Perkiomen: 0.5 percent
- Plymouth: 7.2 percent
- Pottstown: 1.8 percent
- Red Hill: 0.1 percent
- Rockledge: 0 percent
- Royersford: 1.4 percent
- Salford: 25.5 percent
- Schwenksville: 0.6 percent
- Skippack: 7.9 percent
- Souderton: 3.8 percent
- Springfield: 1.4 percent
- Telford: 0.2 percent
- Towamencin: 5.0 percent
- Trappe: 3.6 percent
- Upper Dublin: 2.7 percent
- Upper Frederick: 2.2 percent
- Upper Gwynedd: 2.7 percent
- Upper Hanover: 16 percent
- Upper Merion: 3.1 percent
- Upper Moreland: 1 percent
- Upper Pottsgrove: 5.3 percent
- Upper Providence: 11. 1 percent
- Upper Salford: 2.7 percent
- West Conshohocken: 5.3 percent
- West Norriton: 0.4 percent
- West Pottsgrove: 0.4 percent
- Whitemarsh: 9.1 percent
- Whitpain: 2.6 percent
- Worcester: 7.6 percent
Upper Merion, led all municipalities in total housing units built at 377. Lower Merion followed with 353, then Norristown with 157, Upper Providence with 144, and Lower Providence with 134.
Roughly half of the 2,219 new units are apartments, officials said. The bulk of the rest are split between single-family detached homes and single-family attached homes.
Most of these homes were built in "designated growth areas," which are usually adjacent to existing development and easily accessible to public infrastructure, the report states. This accounts for 62 percent of all the new housing.
Patch file photo
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