Friday, October 11, 2013

Housing.com Data Science Labs (Latest) Launches: Price Heat Maps

Data Science LabsThe perfect house is difficult to find, and the one that fits your budget, even more so. Price filters work fine, but wouldn’t it be a lot easier if you could check the complete city’s price at one go? Housing presents yet another DSL breakthrough- Price Heat Maps. Price Heat Maps are now available on the Housing website and help people gauge price variations across the city. Colour coded to ensure ease, the map shows localities tainted in a gradation from red to green to indicate high to low prices. You can now simply hover over a locality and find the average price of its houses.

 The Housing Data Science Lab has a team of skilled Data Scientists who have studied the price variable in markets of different cities, and come up with a simple graphic representation for people. The Price Heat Map is now available for the cities of Mumbai, Gurgaon, Hyderabad, Pune, Bengaluru, Noida and Ghaziabad. The Price Heat Map is available for both services, rent and buy and even allows the users to choose the rate according to the area or the number of rooms. Getting a house within your budget just got a whole lot easier! Also, it would provide the users with many other lucrative options such as Housing lifestyle rating, Locality Score, Society score, Connectivity score and neighborhood score which will change the way the users hunt for houses.



About Housing.com :

India’s first map-based real estate search portal, Housing.com is innovating real estate in India. With an approach rooted in technology and accurate data, Housing has taken a route less travelled in Indian real estate industry. Mumbai-based start-up Housing.com  has transformed the way people rent flats. In an age where buying grocery and electronic items are just a few clicks away, it's bewildering that for renting a flat, you still have to go door-to-door inspecting flats with your broker. By changing the fundamental process of home search, housing has taken the inventive lead of bringing houses to the users instead.