Blighted lots cost neighbors. Cared-for ones pay them.
The peer-reviewed urban-greening literature is unusually clear, and the most rigorous evidence in the field is a Penn-led randomized controlled trial. Property values move in measurable, predictable directions depending on whether vacant lots are abandoned, transferred without care, or actively maintained.
The Voicu & Been (NYU Furman) work on community gardens adds a critical detail: the largest property-value gains land in the lowest-income neighborhoods. In Chadsey-Condon, that means the literature predicts the strongest uplift effects, not the weakest. Full research brief with citations.