A draft plan would speed up permitting for residential projects with an affordability component and make more buildings eligible for adaptive reuse.

A proposal from the Los Angeles City Planning Department would revise zoning codes to make room for as many as 250,000 new housing units, reports Kenneth Schrupp for The Center Square. “With housing approvals taking longer than construction, the department’s plan to allow for by-right construction of projects with at least 20% of units affordable to earners of the area median income (a requirement known as inclusionary zoning) is expected to significantly reduce overall development times.”
The city is also expanding its adaptive reuse program, which began in the 1990s with the city’s downtown and Arts District, to include buildings that at least are 15 years old, or 5 years old with a conditional use permit. Previously, buildings had to be built before 1974 to qualify for adaptive reuse.
Schrupp notes that expanding the program could help transform some of the 144 million square feet of L.A.’s vacant office space into housing or other productive uses. “Even if just a tenth of empty offices were converted to housing — many office spaces are simply unfit for conversion due to plumbing and access needs — that would still account for 18,000 new homes.”
FULL STORY: Los Angeles unveils plan to allow 250,000 new homes amid housing crisis

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San Diego to Rescind Multi-Unit ADU Rule
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Electric Vehicles for All? Study Finds Disparities in Access and Incentives
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City of Albany
UCLA Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies
Mpact (formerly Rail~Volution)
Chaddick Institute at DePaul University
City of Piedmont, CA
Great Falls Development Authority, Inc.
HUDs Office of Policy Development and Research