Are you talking about nationally?! |
It absolutely does mean detached to most people. Stop trying to play word games and pretend that townhouses are other multifamily housing types are the same as SFH. Most people do not agree with this deceptive YIMBY lingo. |
No the report is about Montgomery County and Frederick. This is from the Montgomery County section of the report. |
DP. One unit on one lot does not necessarily mean detached. Rowhouses are single family houses. Which means "townhomes" are single family houses. Rowhouses can span the whole block, but in Montgomery County, "townhomes" usually come in rows of six or eight. But I agree it's confusing. If a townhome is a SFH in a row of six or eight attached SFHs, then a side-by-side duplex should be a SFH in a row of two attached SFHs and side-by-side triplex would be a SFH in a row of three attached SFHs. In fact they actually exist like that in Montgomery County (the ones I know of are MPDUs). But you would have to subdivide an existing lot. Maybe that's the difference? The duplexes in the zoning proposal would be a row of two attached SFHs on the same lot? Like if you lived in one and rented out the other. Or like a friend of mine, who grew up in a triple decker (three units on top of each other), owned by her extended family, and the different households each had their own unit. But I don't know why a random neighbor would care, or even know, if the two or three attached units were on the same lot or on different lots. |
Could you link to this report, please? |
How can a townhouse be multifamily if there's only one unit in the building and on the lot? I have lived in a multifamily townhouse, but that's because it was three-story rowhouse split up into three units (one per floor). |
I really feel like this is a distinction without a difference. The issue at hand: currently only one unit can be on one piece of land and the proposal is for more than one unit to be allowable on that piece of land. If I tear down my SFH and build a structure with two units, it doesn't really matter whether that lot gets subdivided to account for the two units or not....at least to the issues surrounding supply/demand, impact to parking, school and other infrastructure, property values, etc.... |
Of course it matters. If you subdivide, it's one unit on one lot. If you don't subdivide, it's two units on one lot - same as ADUs. |
You just restated the distinction...but not the difference. How does that impact any of the discussion for or against this proposal? |
People with kids don't want to live in apartments. Children have ten times as much energy as your stupid dog, and they need lots of space. Replacing single family homes with apartments is just removing housing for families and replacing it with housing for childless adults. All we're doing is changing the demographics of who gets housing. |
People with kids live in apartments all over the world. |
Maybe that's a question for the BUT SFH! people to answer. The proposed changes would potentially lead to an increase in the number of SFHs. |
All of this is going to make single family homes even more valuable. If you already own a SFH, the lesson here is to never, ever, ever sell. |
Children all over the world, including in Montgomery County, live in apartments. |
So what? Lots of people in the world die of malaria too. Doesn't mean I want to be one of them. Also, tell me you don't have kids without telling me.... |