The line graph illustrates the number of single-family houses built in the United States in four areas, namely Northeast, Midwest, South, and West between 2006 and 2012. The number of private houses changed over the years.
Overall, the dates of each region show that the number of family homes decreased at similar rates during the six-year period.
The amount of single-family homes built in the South was 900,000 in 2006. The quantity of houses started to decrease sharply until it reached 450 000 in 2008. In addition, the number of homes kept declining to the bottom until 2010, after then began to increase between 2010 to 2012.
The image shows a line graph titled “New Residential Construction” with the x-axis labeled “Year” from 2006 to 2012 and the y-axis labeled “Single-family homes” from 0 to 1,000,000 in increments of 100,000. There are four lines representing different regions, with the South having the highest number of homes in 2006 at over 800,000 and the West having the lowest in 2012 at under 200,000. The Northeast and Midwest both show a decline over the years, with the Northeast starting at nearly 300,000 and ending at under 200,000, and the Midwest starting at just over 600,000 and ending at under 300,000.
