Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
You realize there is both population growth, more desirability to live in cities and particularly DC, right? DC has grown by 100,000 in the last 10 or so years. At its peak, DC had over 800,000 residents. There is no reason not to at least try to get to that level.
DC had the current height limit yet housed 800,000 people.
No Rosslyn-style towers necessary. Imagine that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
You realize there is both population growth, more desirability to live in cities and particularly DC, right? DC has grown by 100,000 in the last 10 or so years. At its peak, DC had over 800,000 residents. There is no reason not to at least try to get to that level.
Why is this desirable? Can our infrastructure handle more people? Can our schools? What is the value in more people? Perhaps if you want more people you need to go to Nyc.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, ^ right.
Basically, I'm saying that if DC has this magic wand to tell developers what to do. then tell them what to do. We don't have to change the ONLY unique features of our city for them. There's plenty of land yet to be developed, and the Mayor and Council can easily pass laws to incentivize mixed income housing within current height requirements. What exactly is magical about seven stories??
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
You realize there is both population growth, more desirability to live in cities and particularly DC, right? DC has grown by 100,000 in the last 10 or so years. At its peak, DC had over 800,000 residents. There is no reason not to at least try to get to that level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
You realize there is both population growth, more desirability to live in cities and particularly DC, right? DC has grown by 100,000 in the last 10 or so years. At its peak, DC had over 800,000 residents. There is no reason not to at least try to get to that level.
Why is this desirable? Can our infrastructure handle more people? Can our schools? What is the value in more people? Perhaps if you want more people you need to go to Nyc.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, ^ right.
Basically, I'm saying that if DC has this magic wand to tell developers what to do. then tell them what to do. We don't have to change the ONLY unique features of our city for them. There's plenty of land yet to be developed, and the Mayor and Council can easily pass laws to incentivize mixed income housing within current height requirements. What exactly is magical about seven stories??
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
You realize there is both population growth, more desirability to live in cities and particularly DC, right? DC has grown by 100,000 in the last 10 or so years. At its peak, DC had over 800,000 residents. There is no reason not to at least try to get to that level.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, ^ right.
Basically, I'm saying that if DC has this magic wand to tell developers what to do. then tell them what to do. We don't have to change the ONLY unique features of our city for them. There's plenty of land yet to be developed, and the Mayor and Council can easily pass laws to incentivize mixed income housing within current height requirements. What exactly is magical about seven stories??
![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
You realize there is both population growth, more desirability to live in cities and particularly DC, right? DC has grown by 100,000 in the last 10 or so years. At its peak, DC had over 800,000 residents. There is no reason not to at least try to get to that level.
Why is this desirable? Can our infrastructure handle more people? Can our schools? What is the value in more people? Perhaps if you want more people you need to go to Nyc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
You realize there is both population growth, more desirability to live in cities and particularly DC, right? DC has grown by 100,000 in the last 10 or so years. At its peak, DC had over 800,000 residents. There is no reason not to at least try to get to that level.
Roght, but if you are "passing" all these laws, pass 15% of 5. Developers still make $$$.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
I am in favor of raising height limits a bit only if we can be sure that a significant proportion (at least 15%, perhaps?) of new development is devoted to affordable housing.
How about just making a law saying 15%of new development needs to be affordable housing, and coincide with current height requirement? Not sure how raising a bit makes a bit of difference
Because 15% of 7 stories is more than zero% of 5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
I am in favor of raising height limits a bit only if we can be sure that a significant proportion (at least 15%, perhaps?) of new development is devoted to affordable housing.
How about just making a law saying 15%of new development needs to be affordable housing, and coincide with current height requirement? Not sure how raising a bit makes a bit of difference
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I support this. It will help bring down housing costs, and greater density is more environmentally friendly.
In the city, green spaces and shade trees and resulting cooler spaces amid urban heat islands are definitely more environmentally friendly. Hip upscale, mixed-use condo towers will neither bring prices down nor save corn fields in Frederick County. Different market segments, different residential demographics.
Where do you think the new residents will come from? Spontaneous generation of yuppies?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Man how do you support this? It sounds like a great move for the city.
This is a developer play which is why Bowser is prostituting herself again to do their bidding. For fatter margins, raising not eliminating the height restriction would forever alter one of the most distinctive and attractive feature about Washington DC.