Nice false flag you planted, there. |
Density bros have an almost religious fanaticism that is really difficult to understand. Most people are not against building houses. They just don’t want to be completely trampled over by developers forced to suffer from the consequences. You cannot increase the zoned density by factor of 4-8x and expect everything to just magically work out our. Zoning is the way that localities can ensure that infrastructure capacity matches development patterns. Without responsible zoning decisions the real estate industry will build anything and everything they want to the detriment of local government services, public health, and environmental resources. |
The level of YImBY victimhood is embarrassing. I mean, it’s a cringe level amount of embarrassment that I feel for them. |
And there is vast quantities of commercial space on the County that can be converted to apartments, condos, flats, townhouses, etc. And much of it close to current infrastructure and Metro. |
Dude, infrastructure can, believe it or not, be expanded. It's actually possible, believe it or not, to build stuff to support things. What a concept! |
Thanks champ! You people are the ones spending countless hours complaining about apartment buildings. The only pathetic ones are you lmao. |
Every time I read an opinion piece by some think tank dude or a Moco high-level planning professional, I look up property sales public records. Magically they are all in my general vicinity: Bannockburn, Sumner, Sprinfield. All the places where these quadruplexes on SFH lots are highly unlikely to become reality. Why? Because it won't work out economically, if you can build a 3-4m craftsman bungaloid, you don't need to bother with a low cost quadruplex. This is what've come to loathe the most about MoCo: two faced limousine liberals. |
You must think you're so witty. So here is one for you: just because something makes sense and CAN be done, it doesn't mean it will be done in MOCO. The MPCS is increasing caps right now on class size. Can they build more schools and hire more teachers? Yes. Will they? No. The county demographer uses some lame 1960s formula to project enrollment that assumes that very few people in apartment buildings have kids of school age. I happen to leave not far from one of just half a dozen of buildings that are districted to Whitman. EVERYBODY in that building has kids, they rent there because of Whitman specifically. So you with your humor are cute and all, but so off the mark. |
Because developers care so much about what people need and will build that and only that. |
Ok, Zoomer. |
Also, we can’t complain about things that don’t yet exist, we are trying to get people to make some rational choices. You are the one wasting time whining about the fact that it’s just not fair that everyone can’t have everything and live everywhere and get a pony ![]() |
This. Make the change in development legally dependent on financing and build-out of public facilities/infrastructure (or differential funding with demonstrated existing adequate capacities). [i]Then[i] we can talk about additional densities in places not currently zoned for them. |
355 is prime for all you YIMBYs Grosvenor to Shady Grove - could add tens of thousands of units in that space that is currently occupied by parking lots, chain restaurants and crappy furniture stores. Marlo should be gutted and made a condo building.
Why touch SFHs when there is so many opportunities out there that are a win win for everyone. |
As a resident of one of those neighborhoods, I hope you are correct. |
There is a tension but the negative effects accrue mostly to big corporate landlords, not homeowners. The big corporate landlords have an interest in limiting the stock of SFH and driving up the prices of SFH because doing so creates more customers for them and increases the rents that they can charge. “Compact growth” is nothing more than a long con that took a lot of land off the table for development and limited housing choice to the small areas experiencing growth. There are some earnest people who thought — and still think — compact growth is the right policy but even many of them now realize that their policy preference drives up housing costs. For SFH owner occupants, their location alone affords them more than enough price protection against increased supply because there’s almost no chance that there will be a significant increase in SFH in their location (especially if they’re close to the beltway or a metro stop). Personally, as a detached SFH owner, I am more than happy to see rental apartments and even townhouses break ground because having more people in my neighborhood makes nicer retail and dining more viable, which makes my life nicer and increases demand for SFH in my neighborhood. |