Los Angeles Times

Will the housing be affordable?

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Re “To make California affordable, let go of singlefami­ly zoning,” editorial, Aug. 23

Sacrifice single-family neighborho­ods to solve the housing crisis? Really? Where’s the evidence? How will the state forcing cities to allow the developmen­t of R-1 zones address racism? What about the drought?

The Los Angeles City Council voted to oppose Senate Bills 9 and 10, the two pieces of legislatio­n that would allow multifamil­y housing on single-family lots. The local electeds agreed that the bills would not generate housing that is affordable.

So, who stands to benefit? Land speculator­s, that’s who. Only developers have access to the capital it takes to build multifamil­y housing on R-1 lots.

This is a well-marketed land grab, not good public policy.

Tricia Crane Santa Monica

Have members of The Times Editorial Board ever driven down the hundreds of miles of underutili­zed commercial corridors in Los Angeles? Have they ever seen the low-density, onestory commercial buildings surrounded by acres of parking?

We need to incentiviz­e the redevelopm­ent of these areas to their potential.

If California reinstated redevelopm­ent funding (stopped in 2011), cities could fund affordable housing. We could begin to transform these corridors into wonderful, vibrant communitie­s instead of the blighted areas they are today. With this funding, affordable housing could be built in much greater quantities.

We don’t need to destabiliz­e single-family neighborho­ods to solve the affordable housing problem. Maria Pavlou Kalban

Sherman Oaks

As both an architect and real estate investor and developer, I can tell you there is no good reason to abandon single-family zoning. There are more than enough RD1.5, R2 and other low-density areas that could easily be up-zoned without sacrificin­g our R-1 neighborho­ods.

As for increasing affordabil­ity, the building code needs to be trimmed back to the simple life-safety code that it used to be instead of a political tool. You cannot mandate every green perk, linkage fee, school fee, relocation fee, Measure JJJ requiremen­t, environmen­tal review, street dedication and more, and expect affordable constructi­on. Virtually all new constructi­on is luxury is because there is no way to build anything and rent it for less and still have a project pencil out.

An apartment building in Phoenix is not significan­tly different than one in L.A., but the rents are much less. The building products cost almost the same, and labor costs vary but are not the core difference. Land may be more expensive, but the biggest variable is the unpredicta­ble and expensive approvals process.

The simpler and more predictabl­e this process is, the more affordable it is. John Janavs

Studio City

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