RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Housing Market Capitalization of Pipeline Risk: Evidence from a Shock to Salience and Awareness JF Land Economics FD University of Wisconsin Press SP 652 OP 667 DO 10.3368/le.100.4.040220-0047R1 VO 100 IS 4 A1 Herrnstadt, Evan A1 Sweeney, Richard L. YR 2024 UL http://le.uwpress.org/content/100/4/652.abstract AB We study how house prices responded to a deadly 2010 pipeline explosion in San Bruno, California, which shocked attention and information. We find that home prices near pipelines in the Bay Area declined by 2% initially, but this gap quickly dissipated. We see no response among properties similarly exposed in other markets or in response to an informational letter sent to households the following year. These results suggest that home buyers are willing to pay to avoid pipeline risk when the issue has their attention, but this attention is hard to capture and is fleeting.