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Culture War Roundup for the week of February 6, 2023

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"New residential development" in NIMBY cities (as opposed to rural America) usually means tearing down existing single-family homes on large lots and replacing them with high-density housing on small lots, which consists of multi-floor, multi-family apartments, at least 20% affordable or subsidized units, and no yards.

I don't know about percentages, but in my portion of a major NIMBY city, development usually does not tear down single family homes, but instead tears down poor-quality 1- or 2- story apartment buildings (often of the dingbat variety, which does not age well at all) and puts up in their place 10-12 story (4-5 of which is above-ground parking) stickbuilt cookie cutter "luxury" apartment blocks with rents that are far higher than the units replaced (because newer and nicer amenities, and often larger individual units).

The new units may be more expensive, but the net effect is still to depress prices generally. Yuppies move into the new "luxury" units, freeing up the mid-level housing they used to occupy for the middle class, in turn freeing up cheap housing for the poor.

Jesus, are those stickbuilt things really up to 12 storeys now? We're going to have a lot of deaths when one of those burns. Or are they only 6-7 wood above concrete?

6-7 stories above 4-5 concrete parking-garage floors.

Are you sure? The limit prescribed by the US's International Building Code for apartment buildings (occupancy R-2) has not been increased beyond five stories of heavy timber (type IV-HT) or four stories of dimensional lumber (type V) on top of a concrete podium, with a total building height of 85 feet for heavy timber or 70 feet for dimensional lumber.

But maybe your city uses a different code.

I think there may be a difference with newer engineered timber buildings, e.g.: https://www.fox6now.com/news/worlds-tallest-mass-timber-building-milwaukee-ascent

I think an engineer (def. local authorities sufficiently lobbied) can override this sort of thing -- it's expensive, but definitely is not physically unpossible:

https://www.vancouverisawesome.com/real-estate/tallest-wood-residential-tower-world-vancouver-bc-1943876

I could be wrong and it could just be 5 above the parking. Regardless, they're tall. And expensive. And generally replacing old apartment/condo units instead of single-family homes.