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Metropolitan DC Local Politics
Reply to "Montgomery for All Missing Middle presentation "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Welcome to the club. Long story short if you bought a home in a single family home zoned neighborhood, you might end next to a new apartment building with no parking. If you are against it you will be called racist. Good luck! Regards, Arlington resident that wants a duplex next door, not a six plex on the 5000 sqft lot with no parking [/quote] Could neighborhood associations form HOAs that protect the ability to develop multifamily housing? If so, that will definitely happen in many of the wealthier Bethesda/CC neighborhoods I would pay a lot of money in annual HOA dues to accomplish this.[/quote] HOAs do not have authority over zoning.[/quote] So if zoning laws changed in Potomac, a homeowner in Avenel could build a duplex? Their HOA would allow this? But single family neighborhoods will be destroyed if any house can be torn down and replaced with a 12-story apartment building. Trying to learn[/quote] Typically HOA have restrictive covenants attached to the properties in the neighborhood that prevent people from doing this. You would need to look up the deed and title information for you house to know what is allowed. People that live in a neighborhood that does not have these limitations should look into establishing deed restrictions now with your neighbors, if you want to prevent this from occurring in your local area. [/quote] Why would you voluntarily give up your right to do what you want with your property?[/quote] [b]Because if you want to sell a SFH, you would benefit financially from being surrounded by SFHs rather than 4-5 story condo buildings. [/b] A SFH is a n-hood of SFHs is more desirable. Now, of course, a buyer might buy to build a condo building rather than live in the SFH. The end result is that those who want SFHs will move, taking their tax dollars with them. [/quote] No, if you want to sell your property, you benefit financially from there being a wide range of potential uses than there being a very narrow range of potential uses. Also, I am 100% certain that a detached single-unit house, next to a duplex, is still a detached single-unit house. If you're living in a detached single-unit house, and someone builds a duplex next door, your house will still be a detached single-unit house. A duplex next door will not infect your house with duplexitis. [/quote] Because I want to live in an SFH area, and I am not interested in being surrounded by duplexes. Then, I will live elsewhere. And DMV, including NoVa and even DC, has plenty of options. I note there is miles of underutilized commercial space along the Pike that could be apartments, condos, townhouses, etc. A substantial portion of that space will never be office buildings or retail space. [/quote] That would make too much sense and it isn’t punitive enough…they hate the IDEA of SFH zoning.[/quote] "They" who? Nobody is proposing to eradicate single family houses. Single family houses will still be allowed. It's just that other housing types will ALSO be allowed. If you feel [u]punished[/u] by this idea, that's on you.[/quote][/quote]
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