Discuss
I'm beginning to think that cities should be banned from contracting to build "affordable units" and should be required to just buy existing housing on the open market and rent it out.
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So Palo Alto just approved (maybe not final approvals, but I think the difficult ones) its first affordable housing for seven years. paloaltoonline.com/news/2019… The project proposed is a *lot* denser and bulkier than what would be allowed for a market-rate project.
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Without that extra density and FAR, I think this project would have been a lot more expensive per unit. In my ideal world, that extra density and FAR would be allowed everywhere. Would requiring that affordable housing go through the standard rules help get us there?

Jan 27, 2019 · 6:03 AM UTC

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Or would requiring affordable housing go through the market-rate construction rules just mean the city spends the same affordable housing money on fewer units? Unfortunately, I'd guess the latter is going to be the much more substantial effect.
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There are also special cases, like housing for developmentally disabled adults (as included in part of this project) that may call for different sorts of housing than market-rate.
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The higher density lowers the cost to the non-profit building the project. But not necessarily the cost to the city.