L.A. City Council wants to incentivize larger apartments

Government needs to stay out of the housing market.  The more they mandate building affordable housing, the more expensive housing gets.  The more regulations they have. The more expensive the housing unit.  Force solar, end the use gas, and the cost of using a house, goes up.

“For three decades, For three decades, Angelenos have faced higher rates of overcrowded housing than in any other major city in the United States. A new initiative by several members of the Los Angeles City Council aims to provide a small measure of relief.

In a motion introduced on February 9, Los Angeles City Council President Paul Krekorian has proposed the creation of a new density bonus incentive to promote the construction of large family units in new apartment buildings.

“The Los Angeles General Plan prioritizes the need for a mix of housing types across the City, including rental and homeownership opportunities for singles, families, seniors, persons with disabilities, and multi-generational families,” reads the motion,”

Let the market place determine the size of apartments, not government.  When you get government involved you always gets corruption, unions and greedy corporations.

L.A. City Council wants to incentivize larger apartments

Three- and four-bedroom units are uncommon in new apartment buildings

STEVEN SHARP, Urbanize,  2/15/24  https://la.urbanize.city/post/la-city-council-wants-incentivize-larger-apartments?utm_source=Urbanize+Newsletter&utm_campaign=320c181e18-news-la-daily-2024-02-16&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_f2c8779a36-320c181e18-199816315

For three decades, For three decades, Angelenos have faced higher rates of overcrowded housing than in any other major city in the United States. A new initiative by several members of the Los Angeles City Council aims to provide a small measure of relief.

In a motion introduced on February 9, Los Angeles City Council President Paul Krekorian has proposed the creation of a new density bonus incentive to promote the construction of large family units in new apartment buildings.

“The Los Angeles General Plan prioritizes the need for a mix of housing types across the City, including rental and homeownership opportunities for singles, families, seniors, persons with disabilities, and multi-generational families,” reads the motion, which has been referred to the Council’s Planning and Land Use Management Committee for consideration. “Fully a third of the households in the City of Los Angeles are comprised of four or more people, yet only 14% of the renter-occupied housing stock encompasses three- or four-bedroom units. Newly constructed rental units tend to be much smaller, and a majority are studios or one-bedroom units. The lack of three- and four-bedroom rental units makes it difficult for larger households to find appropriate and affordable rental housing.”

The motion calls for the Planning Department to craft a density bonus program which would:

  1. Exempt the square footage of 3rd, 4th, and 5th bedrooms, as well as 3rd and 4th restrooms, from floor area calculations of large family units;
  2. Allow for an additional story of height beyond existing zoning restrictions and bonuses for developments consisting primarily of large family units; and
  3. Require a 99-year covenant ensuring that the units will maintain the same unit mix and be made available to households earning no more than 120 percent of the area median income level.

The motion also clarifies that the large family unit bonus would be additive to existing incentives through the density bonus and Transit Oriented Communities guidelines.

In addition to providing larger homes for the roughly 17 percent of Los Angeles renter households living in overcrowded apartments, Krekorian argues that the project would help the city adapt to changes brought about by the global pandemic, including a shift to remote work. Likewise, larger residential units could more easily accommodate multi-generational households.

The motion comes at a time when the City of Los Angeles is under pressure to rezone and implement new programs to accommodate up to 255,000 new homes in the coming years. As part of the effort, Planning officials are rolling out a citywide adaptive reuse ordinance, expanding upon a program which allowed for the conversion of dozens of aging Downtown office buildings into housing in recent decades.

2 thoughts on “L.A. City Council wants to incentivize larger apartments

  1. paul krekorian is as corrupt as every other la city counselor arrested by the fbi atvthis point was my opponent in the march twenty twenty primary is now finally termed out.
    the city of la planning commission is its own deep state when it comes to being compromised by developers greasing the huizar style wheels of government corruption at la city hall.
    seven candidates are vying for the open seat in council district two in this years march 5 primary.
    will we see another la city counselor get arrested by the fbi right after the march primary like we did in 2020?
    for those of you living in council district two be sure to find me on your ballot by march 5th and do your duty and vote 4 rudy the only qualified candidate on the ballot that supports protecting prop 13, restoring integrity at city hall and local zoning control.
    #Vote4Rudy

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