Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better to start with looking at low hanging fruit, like underutilized land. Doing away with historical designations and upzoning DuPont, Logan Circle and Capitol Hill would have a much bigger impact. It’s also more climate friendly. Tall buildings are not very climate friendly.
Where is the underutilized land?
15 years ago, that would have been appropriate. At this juncture, not so much.
Anonymous wrote:DCs problem is a long term misfit between the amount of downtown office space and the amount of housing. There are acres of underused office buildings post-Covid. Rather than raise the height limit, tear them down and build apartments. Anyway, DCs population is falling - affordable housing will happen naturally as the city continues to decline.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Better to start with looking at low hanging fruit, like underutilized land. Doing away with historical designations and upzoning DuPont, Logan Circle and Capitol Hill would have a much bigger impact. It’s also more climate friendly. Tall buildings are not very climate friendly.
Where is the underutilized land?
15 years ago, that would have been appropriate. At this juncture, not so much.
Anonymous wrote:Better to start with looking at low hanging fruit, like underutilized land. Doing away with historical designations and upzoning DuPont, Logan Circle and Capitol Hill would have a much bigger impact. It’s also more climate friendly. Tall buildings are not very climate friendly.