Talk Back
Post a Comment
|
||||||||||
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- Decorative Concrete is Flexible and Affordable
- Custom Builder Design Challenge Winners Offer Imaginative Plans for Lake House
- 5 Great Green Building Examples
- The High-Performance Home Pitch
- Homebuilders, It's Time to Turn Your Business Around
- Analysis of results from Professional Builder’s 2008 Green Building Survey
- Small Sells: Homes on Micro-lots Prove that Size Doesn't Matter
- The Sun Shines on Solar
- Wild and Wonderful Basement Remodel
- Marketing Dollars that Work for the Community
Study Says Growth Control a Recipe for Unaffordable Housig
Rob Fanjoy
January 1, 2000
Professional Builder
A new study by the Reason Public Policy Institute points to growth control policies-specifically urban growth boundaries-as having a detrimental impact on housing supply and affordability. The study, Urban-growth Boundaries and Housing Affordability: Lessons From Portland, reveals that families looking for affordable housing are the real losers when artificial limits on growth become law.
"It’s clear from the Reason Institute’s research that urban growth boundaries and affordable housing don’t mix," says Tom Coyle, senior vice president of the California Building Industry Association (CBIA). "The well-documented findings of this report show that new designs on land use and growth policies that fail to adequately address housing needs will make an already bad situation in our state worse."
The study focuses on Portland, Oregon’s 20-year experiment with urban growth boundaries (UGBs), which are lines drawn by planners designed to redirect growth to already urbanized areas and fence off from development surrounding open space and agricultural land. The Portland urban growth boundary has been frequently used by growth management enthusiasts as a model for other communities-including many of California’s high job-generating areas-to use in adopting land-use policies or drafting growth-control initiatives.
The Reason Institute’s report found that Portland’s UGB has had profound consequences on housing markets, including:
© 2008, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.


Digg This