Teleconference this Saturday, Feb. 6th, with Author and Prof. Patrick Condon on up-zoning and why it can't create affordable housing

Reprint from LIVABLE CALIFORNIA

Join us tomorrow, Saturday Feb. 6 at 10 am with famed Vancouver urban planner and UBC Prof. Patrick Condon, who says: “I am neither Nimby or Yimby” after years of embracing dense zoning.

Author of the new book, Sick Cities, Prof. Condon says:

“I strongly advocate for affordable housing and additional density when it can be shown that this leads to more affordable housing. … And over time, new density reduces auto use and increases walkability. Where I depart from many Yimby advocates: I don't share their faith that adding density will lower cost. It mostly adds to land price, thus no benefit to buyers.” Unaffordability is caused by “an ever-increasing gap between wages and the price of urban land.”

Patrick told Vancouver Real Estate podcast

  • “We need to take another look at single-family home zoning. Everyone thinks zoning is the problem. I was in the camp of looking at how to organically increase density.

  • In Vancouver there is no such thing as single-family zoning anymore. We have incrementally quadrupled density … but we haven’t seen any decrease in per square foot housing costs. That evidence is indisputable.

  • To summarize: Zoning is not the problem.”

Livable California opposes state Sen. Scott Wiener’s FOURTH attempt to pave over communities from South L.A. to City of San Fernando. Legislators approved a sea of 67 housing bills in 4 years, jammed with rewards for market-rate density. One result: a dearth of housing for low-income families.

Please join us in this fight by donating now to Livable California. We support SB 15 (Portantino). We oppose:

We are small fry, fighting huge forces. Please DONATE HERE to Livable California, now. We thank you!  

See you on Feb. 6, at 10 am, with Patrick Condon!  

Here's your call-in info for Saturday Feb 6 at 10 A.M:

Via Computer:

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6377599629?pwd=WTlWS1RjcWpoc3VERVhWNkozZkNtUT09

One-Tap Mobile:

+12133388477,,6377599629#,,,,,,0#,,1234#

Via Phone: 

+1 213 338 8477 / Meeting ID: 637 759 9629 / Passcode: 1234

Previous
Previous

COVID-19 Update

Next
Next

Lunch and Learn with the City Forest Officer: Google's AI Tree Canopy Tool - February 10th