For those who saw the Carlsbad Train Redevelopment and wondered what other apartment houses (and affordable housing) are being built around town, check out this article:
An excerpt:
Construction began this week at 901 West Washington St. in Mission Hills, where developer Soheil Nakhshab is building 54 studio apartments. He likens each unit’s design to a Swiss Army knife, with built-in tables and beds that fold up into the walls.
The project would not have been possible without Complete Communities, San Diego’s most aggressive attempt yet at encouraging high-density housing near public transit.
Approved by the City Council in November 2020, just one month before Mayor Kevin Faulconer and five councilmembers left office, Complete Communities allows developers to build apartments with unlimited density and height if they agree to set aside a much greater share of the homes as affordable housing than would otherwise be required.
The program is designed to withstand political and neighborhood opposition to individual projects, letting developers bypass the Planning Commission and City Council and get building permits directly from city staffers. The result has been swift approval of bigger projects with smaller, less-expensive homes.
Sites zoned for single-family homes are not eligible for Complete Communities, no matter how close they are to public transit.
Nakhshab said his project, which includes no off-street parking, would open up Mission Hills to more young professionals who don’t want the expense of car ownership and can’t afford the pricey single-family homes that dominate the neighborhood.
“What we’re trying to do is give them an opportunity to live in a prosperous, vibrant neighborhood with tons of public amenities at an affordable rate,” Nakhshab said.
Watch the vastly underrated “Fifth Element” and look at Dallas Corbin’s apartment. The words “unlimited” and “zoning” are mutually exclusive. Wait until building shadows start to impinge upon single family zoned properties. Before even that happens watch for the parking problems running out a dozen blocks.
Welcome to West Los Angeles. Been there. done that. Got the heck out.
Does this mean they can build a seven story apartment complex in Leucadia by the beach if it’s low income? Currently the height limit is three stories
The City of San Diego created the unlimited height and density program – it’s not county-wise…..yet. But Encinitas is under pressure from the state to build low-income housing so who knows what they will have to do to comply.
Hat tip to Richard who sent this in – other cities who are complying:
https://www.nbcsandiego.com/news/local/375-affordable-housing-units-coming-online-around-san-diego-county-after-20m-in-grants/2923172/
That tall building better not shade my solar panels! Lawsuit! LOL! 😀