The Palm Beach Post

Seattle tells developers to go taller, denser

Tech money influx putting crunch on affordable housing.

- By Phuong Le

SEATTLE — Seattle’s booming tech industry has brought a massive influx of new residents with big wallets to the city.

But an ensuing housing crunch has led to skyrocketi­ng rents and home prices that have strained middleand working-class families and deepened the city’s homelessne­ss crisis.

To keep constructi­on humming and help people of all incomes stay, city officials have come up with what’s dubbed the “grand bargain”: Let developers build taller and denser in core areas across the city and require them to either include units that working-class people can afford, or pay for projects to be built elsewhere.

Backlash was swift from those worried increased heights and density will change the character of single-family neighborho­ods that dominate this picturesqu­e Northwest city.

But equally vocal groups have formed to back the city’s mandatory housing affordabil­ity plan, which aims to create 6,200 new affordable units over 20 years for those making 60 percent of area median income.

More growth and housing choices mean teachers, firefighte­rs and other laborers can remain in Seattle alongside wealthy tech workers, supporters say.

As the city has grown, “there’s a real sense of some folks winning and some folks losing as part of that growth,” said Seattle Councilmem­ber Rob Johnson, an urban planner who is sponsoring the housing proposal.

“If we make no changes to zoning, those buildings will be built, and they will be built without affordable housing components to them,” he added.

Cities such as San Francisco, New York and Washington, D.C., have policies that require developmen­t to include affordable units. Philadelph­ia is among those weighing similar mandates.

Friction over growth is playing out in other cities grappling with housing shortages.

In Portland, Ore., the city’s plan to accommodat­e growth partly by allowing taller buildings downtown has stirred opposition. In California, a controvers­y is brewing over a state bill that eases building restrictio­ns around transit hubs and corridors and end parking requiremen­ts.

In Seattle — a city of about 714,000 bordered largely by water — growth has been explosive. Fueled by Amazon and other tech giants, Seattle added nearly 75,000 jobs between 2012 and 2016, and 87,000 people in the past five years.

The city subsidizes housing for the poorest, and the market is expanding for top-income brackets. But little has been done for those in the middle who already spend too much of their wages on rent, Johnson said.

Seattle’s median home price has skyrockete­d to $757,000 — the highest ever, according to the Northwest Multiple Listing Service.

Average rent for a one-bedroom apartment has increased 35 percent over five years, but recently started to dip.

The changes have led to angst and soul-searching.

“It’s forcing us to have a hard, divisive conversati­on about what we want to be as a city,” Councilmem­ber Mike O’Brien said.

Critics say the plan gives away too much to developers and isn’t the best way to add affordable housing. They also say it will lead to older and theoretica­lly cheaper apartments and homes being torn down.

A coalition of groups is challengin­g the city’s environmen­tal review of the plan, saying it didn’t adequately consider issues such as the impacts to schools, traffic, parking and trees.

“It’s being sold that we have to change the zoning in order to accommodat­e the growth. Are the zoning changes the best way to get affordable housing?” said Susanna Lin with Seattle Fair Growth, a neighborho­od group opposed to the plan.

“You increase the rate of displaceme­nt. You lose the historical character, and communitie­s are uprooted,” Lin said.

Supporters say more housing closer to transit, schools and services would limit sprawl and accommodat­e surging demand. Options beyond pricey single-family homes — such as duplexes, cottages, tiny apartments and high-rises — would allow those with more modest incomes to live in desirable neighborho­ods. Existing homes are already being torn down and replaced by expensive McMansions, they said.

“People are afraid of the unknown, but they won’t see as much change as they’re afraid of,” said Jay Lazerwitz, an architect who has lived in Seattle for 33 years and supports the plan. “We’re not losing huge swaths of single-family homes.”

From his two-story Craftsman home, Greg Flood points down the street to where a yellow crane looms above a constructi­on site of a 40-foot apartment complex in the Wallingfor­d neighborho­od just minutes from downtown.

Buildings three to four stories high would be allowed on his street, now dotted with bungalows and stately Craftsman homes.

“You can add density without adverse impacts to parking, light, gardens, yard space,” said Flood, who noted there are areas in the city already zoned for denser buildings. The proposal would allow multi-unit apartments next to a smaller single-family home, creating a disparity in size and scale, he said.

Several blocks north, Bryan Kirschner welcomes the changes as a way to add economic diversity. He said single-family zoning historical­ly has excluded certain people from many parts of the city.

“We’re all better off if people of different ages, income, background­s and ethnicitie­s live together in mixed neighborho­od,” said the 46-yearold, who works at Google.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ELAINE THOMPSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 ?? A four-story mixed-use building takes shape at the end of a street of older, singlefami­ly homes in Seattle. City officials want to let developers erect taller and denser buildings in core areas of the city, and require them to include units that...
PHOTOS BY ELAINE THOMPSON / ASSOCIATED PRESS 2017 A four-story mixed-use building takes shape at the end of a street of older, singlefami­ly homes in Seattle. City officials want to let developers erect taller and denser buildings in core areas of the city, and require them to include units that...
 ??  ?? Greg Flood, a resident of Seattle’s Wallingfor­d neighborho­od, stands on the porch of his two-story Craftsman home and talks about a proposal to allow three- to five-story housing to be built on his block.
Greg Flood, a resident of Seattle’s Wallingfor­d neighborho­od, stands on the porch of his two-story Craftsman home and talks about a proposal to allow three- to five-story housing to be built on his block.

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