#167 Fall 2011 — Bank Accountability

Smart Can Be Affordable

Despite fears that rising prices follow smart growth projects, smart growth and affordable housing advocates need each other to realize the promise of each. 

Courtesy of Smart Growth America

The High Point Hope VI project in Seattle incorporates smart growth design to connect the development to its surrounding community.

Varied Housing Types

Providing a mix of housing types and sizes is one of smart growth’s basic principles. Building apartments alongside townhouses and single-family homes can keep a neighborhood affordable for a wide range of households. Other strategies, like allowing homeowners to build accessory dwelling units — often called “in-law” apartments — can create smaller, more affordable rental housing options in existing single-family neighborhoods without significantly changing their design.

The New Point neighborhood in Beaufort County, South Carolina, is one recent development that has used accessory dwelling units in its home design. By planning land use strategically and creating smaller homes with in-law suites, developers created a very desirable neighborhood that remained more affordable.

To achieve this mix of housing types, smart growth advocates often look for ways to make zoning codes, land use ordinances, and planning decisions more flexible so that multifamily housing and mixed-use neighborhoods all become more feasible. This strategy also allows families to stay in one neighborhood as their housing needs change — providing larger homes for families and smaller homes for young workers and retirees.

Atlanta’s Livable Communities Coalition works on many of these issues, advocating for strategies that mix home sizes and types and increase affordable housing with good access to jobs. LCC recommends, for example, changing zoning codes to allow a wide range of housing types — including affordable owned and rental housing — and incentive-driven inclusionary zoning.

OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE

  • Smart at the Roots

    December 14, 2011

    Smart growth principles can’t be imposed from the outside.

  • Still Transforming Rental Assistance

    December 14, 2011

    HUD, in light of a recent capital needs study, will conduct a “rental assistance demonstration” rather than complete programmatic implementation of its Preserving, Enhancing, and Transforming Rental Assistance plan, which […]

  • Nicolas P. Retsinas

    December 14, 2011

    Nicolas P. Retsinas, a senior lecturer in real estate at the Harvard Business School and director emeritus of Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies, talks with Shelterforce about his long service in the housing field.