Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Skyscrapers surrounding national parks is generally a bad idea.
Really? Why exactly?
Would you rather those National Parks be bulldozed so they can be replaced with more 8-11 story mid rise office or residential buildings? Would that be a better outcome?
Or perhaps you'd like to expand the exurbs even more? Push even farther out into the countryside to make rooms for more houses so people can have 2 hour commutes to downtown? Yeah great idea!
Or, how about we build taller buildings, put more people in them, and then they don't need a car AT ALL.
Central Park is surrounded by tall buildings, and it's doing just fine. Our parks here will, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Skyscrapers surrounding national parks is generally a bad idea.
Really? Why exactly?
Would you rather those National Parks be bulldozed so they can be replaced with more 8-11 story mid rise office or residential buildings? Would that be a better outcome?
Or perhaps you'd like to expand the exurbs even more? Push even farther out into the countryside to make rooms for more houses so people can have 2 hour commutes to downtown? Yeah great idea!
Or, how about we build taller buildings, put more people in them, and then they don't need a car AT ALL.
Central Park is surrounded by tall buildings, and it's doing just fine. Our parks here will, too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, not gonna get me to agree with you OP. DC needs affordable housing near transit, and building up is the way to do it. I don't think all of DC should be turned into downtown Bethesda, but I like the way neighborhoods like Navy Yard are developing with dense buildings and lots of amenities. What I WOULD like to see is more aesthetically pleasing large developments - why are the new builds all so pastichey and ugly these days?
Do you think once they pass this, you'll get input in aesthetics?![]()
No you wont. They'll be pastichey (whatever that means) and ugly and permanent.
That's a great point for people who care about aesthetics (or their opinion of it) more than having enough housing for people of all income levels throughout the city and where it's needed. So, you do you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, lots of upper NW suburbanites lamenting about "our city."
In Cleveland Park we call our neighborhood “the village in the city.” And we want to keep that green, walkable community character.
Anonymous wrote:Skyscrapers surrounding national parks is generally a bad idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, not gonna get me to agree with you OP. DC needs affordable housing near transit, and building up is the way to do it. I don't think all of DC should be turned into downtown Bethesda, but I like the way neighborhoods like Navy Yard are developing with dense buildings and lots of amenities. What I WOULD like to see is more aesthetically pleasing large developments - why are the new builds all so pastichey and ugly these days?
Do you think once they pass this, you'll get input in aesthetics?![]()
No you wont. They'll be pastichey (whatever that means) and ugly and permanent.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, not gonna get me to agree with you OP. DC needs affordable housing near transit, and building up is the way to do it. I don't think all of DC should be turned into downtown Bethesda, but I like the way neighborhoods like Navy Yard are developing with dense buildings and lots of amenities. What I WOULD like to see is more aesthetically pleasing large developments - why are the new builds all so pastichey and ugly these days?
No you wont. They'll be pastichey (whatever that means) and ugly and permanent. Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I honestly don't think taller buildings are necessary. What needs to happen is increased density in close-in neighborhoods. My neighborhood is zoned R-20, as are many very desirable parts of DC that are close to public transport and walkable amenities.
What does R-20 stipulate? It requires that homes remain single family; they cannot be subdivided into separately titled units. Similar zoning code types can be found throughout the city. The same issue plagues inner MoCo areas like Bethesda and Chevy Chase, where there is high demand for housing but NIMBY'ist zoning policies prevent the subdivision of lots or building multi-unit apartment-style housing (even if high end).
Before we build skyscrapers, I suggested the Council further explore the expansion and sub-division of existing plats.
1. I agree that a real build out analysis needs to reflect possible upzonings
2. But it needs to be politically realistic. "We will build mid rises in every neighborhood that is currently detached SFHs" is not politically realistic.
3. Raising the height act does not necessarily mean skyscrapers.
4. Each new building that is built AT the current height limit is a lost opportunity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was there come recent news from her on this?
Yes, see link above. Shes renewing her "push". Basically , wrapping it un her affordable housing smoke and mirrors.
Bowser acts like a ho for her developers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.bizjournals.com/washington/news/2019/05/10/bowser-ready-to-explore-d-c-height-limit-changes.html
Read and weep.
A. That article has no quotes indicating she is proposing raising the height limit. Rather she wants office of planinng to explore many options - which can certainly include upzonings - there are many parts of DC where regular zoning (floor area ratio limits, etc) are binding, the district wide height limit does not matter.
B. Before addressing the height limit, the office of planning would need to do a build out analysis, to determine who much building can still occur without altering the height limit. They did one back in 2012, the last time this came up. However critics said the analysis was not thorough enough, and in particular, IIRC, did not fully explore all potential upzonings.
C. That said, there are plenty of places where buildings above the current height limit would not materially change the look of the historic parts of DC. For one, you could raise it in areas near the MoCo line, where there are already taller buildings nearby on the Md side of the line. Or you could allow taller buildings in some place like L'Enfant Plaza, where I have difficulty seeing the harm.
I am no big fan of Bowser and like the current height limits, but I'd grudgingly be open to changing them once other options are exhausted. The middle class is being squeezed out, and we need increased density if we want to keep middle class families in the city. No bearing on me personally (we have good salaries), but I don't want DC to become a city of rich and poor only, with no middle class that includes [b]teachers, nurses, etc. Some of my child's teachers with families have had to commute from quite far away, and I'd prefer they have more options in the city.
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Please Google DC homebuyer assistance for first time homebuyers - specific programs are available for low income as well as ALL DC government workers including teachers and first responders. Personally know two teachers who have bought beautiful townhomes in transitional neighborhoods (ie they got a deal) and now their homes have appreciated .
Transitional neightborhoods end up, er, transitioned at some point. Which will happen faster after neighborhoods like Navy Yard and NoMa, which are absorbing a lot of the demand now, are built out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Was there come recent news from her on this?
Yes, see link above. Shes renewing her "push". Basically , wrapping it un her affordable housing smoke and mirrors.
Anonymous wrote:Didn't a bunch of posters recently lament DC not being a "real city" because we don't have tall buildings or density?
Anonymous wrote:Wow, lots of upper NW suburbanites lamenting about "our city."