1. Increasing housing stock in already saturated markets stresses resources and creates a demand for more infrastructure.
2. When we have more land and more people, we can build where there is land with suitable infrastructure.
3. This means: don’t build if you don’t create infrastructure.
4. Example: a child climbs on a grown man’s shoulder. He is very strong. He runs around. Looks like fun. Another child jumps on the man. And another. And another. And another. Until he is flat on the ground with a pile of children on his back.
Agree that developers should have to pay the cost for creating infrastructure to support the housing they build. But in general, infrastructure in dense areas will be cheaper per capita to build and maintain than infrastructure in sparse areas. So even if we make them pay the cost, the result will be massive densification, which I'd say would be a good thing, since it would make housing more affordable.
How will it make housing affordable? Can you give me one example in California where housing has become affordable?
Affordable housing exists only because market rate housing developers pay affordable housing fees to subsidize them. This in turn makes market rate housing more expensive.
These split lot units are not affordable. New builds are market rates as the old home. They don’t pay affordable housing fees but they share the same resources that is becoming even more scarce per person.
It costs millions to build roads..one class room is about million dollars in CA. And there are more teachers and their pensions in the future.
It’s like what the Red Queen said..you have to keep running faster than stay in the same place. You have to keep taxing more $$ and taxing more people to maintain old infrastructure. Can you see what I mean?
These are not even high rises or multi family. It doesn’t cost less. I wrote a longer reply but didn’t post it. Their numbers and projections make no sense at all. I actually took the time look it to because I find this kind of number hunting relaxing.
3D printing multi family or high rise sustainable communities by expanding developed cities will solve housing affordability. It will also bring more equity to California by making every single county as desirable to live ..
It costs $800-1200 per sq ft in Bay Area and anywhere between $350-500 in cheaper parts of California. There should be small self contained village clusters and planned communities.
Basic utilities are water, sewage, power, electricity, trash, internet.
Services: post office, fire, police station, hospitals, city hall, library, down town, entertainment, public squares, open spaces, schools, law and order, office spaces, shopping, gas stations, places to congregate etc.
How many of these can be modernized? How many be remote or digital? How many can be electrified or made with renewable resources?
One reason 3D printed homes won’t take off in CA is because of construction unions. Imagine how much money can be saved if we adopted newer modern tech without tier 1 city prices.
Let me give a sample of some stuff I jotted down today. Large and dense cities are never affordable. Denser it gets, infrastructure will only get more expensive because the cost of doing business there also increases. Remember everything is trucked in..it’s expensive.
San Jose has a million population and 3 billion budget.
Oakland has 450k population and 1.7 billion budget
Fremont has 220k and has 340 million budget
Fresno has 545k people and 1.2 billion budget
Cupertino has 60k population and 90 million budget.
Palo Alto has 66k population and 210 million budget.
(Palo alto and mtn view also serve populations of unincorporated cities like Los Altos hills, atherton, wood side etc and that adjustment is included in the budget. Also PA runs and manages its own infrastructure including schools, trash, power and water)
Los Angeles 4 million population and budget is 11.2 billion
I just want one example of housing becoming affordable after it became high density and population increased. One city in California. Just one.
1. Increasing housing stock in already saturated markets stresses resources and creates a demand for more infrastructure.
2. When we have more land and more people, we can build where there is land with suitable infrastructure.
3. This means: don’t build if you don’t create infrastructure.
4. Example: a child climbs on a grown man’s shoulder. He is very strong. He runs around. Looks like fun. Another child jumps on the man. And another. And another. And another. Until he is flat on the ground with a pile of children on his back.
Solution: Find another shoulder to climb upon.
I hope this clarifies.