There are currently two main coalitions in US housing politics in high
cost-of-living areas:
Developer / Pro-business / YIMBY: make it
easier to build more housing. Allow higher densities, more
subdivision, and smaller units. Lower affordable housing minimums,
lower parking minimums, lower anything else that acts as a tax on
development.
Anti-displacement / Affordable housing / Landlord / NIMBY: new housing
is luxury housing, they’re building units that are too small for
families, this construction only benefits the small slice of
people rich enough to afford it. There’s already too much traffic,
not enough parking, and construction means tree removal. Stop condo
conversions and evictions. Impose a transfer tax to stop
speculators.
This division has been shifting some, however, with the development of
density bonus programs. The idea is, developers are allowed to build
more units than zoning would normally allow, but they also have to
make a larger fraction of them available below market rate. For
example, an affordable housing bonus density program could apply to a
property where current zoning would allow eight $1M units and two
affordable $400k units, and offer an option of ten $1M units and ten
affordable $400k units. Programs like this have several advantages:
The number of new affordable units built is higher than it
would be under either current zoning or a new zoning that simply
increased the required fraction of affordable units.
The total number of units available, regardless of
affordability, is higher, taking pressure off the market
elsewhere.
The housing actually gets built, because construction is
profitable.
Other programs along these lines could include:
Remove parking minimums for new housing that’s near
transit, allowing more housing to be built in a way that doesn’t cause
as much traffic.
Raise the cap on on floor-area-ratio more than the cap on
allowed units, leading developers to build more family-sized
units.
For buildings with tenants, allow higher density for landlords
that retain their tenants while rebuilding, providing interim housing
and similarly affordable units in the new building.
These have the same structure, allowing higher density in exchange for
improvements elsewhere: affordability, traffic, parking, number of
family-sized units, displacement. A coalition along these lines could
be pretty broad, and include most of the the anti-displacement,
affordable housing, developer, business, and YIMBY camps. I’m sad that
Cambridge’s affordable
housing overlay proposal has been put
on hold after only getting 5⁄9 councillors when it needed 6⁄9, but
I think future efforts in this direction are very promising.
Realigning Housing Coalitions
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There are currently two main coalitions in US housing politics in high cost-of-living areas:Developer / Pro-business / YIMBY: make it easier to build more housing. Allow higher densities, more subdivision, and smaller units. Lower affordable housing minimums, lower parking minimums, lower anything else that acts as a tax on development.
Anti-displacement / Affordable housing / Landlord / NIMBY: new housing is luxury housing, they’re building units that are too small for families, this construction only benefits the small slice of people rich enough to afford it. There’s already too much traffic, not enough parking, and construction means tree removal. Stop condo conversions and evictions. Impose a transfer tax to stop speculators.
This division has been shifting some, however, with the development of density bonus programs. The idea is, developers are allowed to build more units than zoning would normally allow, but they also have to make a larger fraction of them available below market rate. For example, an affordable housing bonus density program could apply to a property where current zoning would allow eight $1M units and two affordable $400k units, and offer an option of ten $1M units and ten affordable $400k units. Programs like this have several advantages:
The number of new affordable units built is higher than it would be under either current zoning or a new zoning that simply increased the required fraction of affordable units.
The total number of units available, regardless of affordability, is higher, taking pressure off the market elsewhere.
The housing actually gets built, because construction is profitable.
Other programs along these lines could include:
Remove parking minimums for new housing that’s near transit, allowing more housing to be built in a way that doesn’t cause as much traffic.
Remove parking minimums for new housing that isn’t entitled to street parking and pre-pays for decades of public transit passes
Raise the cap on on floor-area-ratio more than the cap on allowed units, leading developers to build more family-sized units.
For buildings with tenants, allow higher density for landlords that retain their tenants while rebuilding, providing interim housing and similarly affordable units in the new building.
These have the same structure, allowing higher density in exchange for improvements elsewhere: affordability, traffic, parking, number of family-sized units, displacement. A coalition along these lines could be pretty broad, and include most of the the anti-displacement, affordable housing, developer, business, and YIMBY camps. I’m sad that Cambridge’s affordable housing overlay proposal has been put on hold after only getting 5⁄9 councillors when it needed 6⁄9, but I think future efforts in this direction are very promising.
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