Quote:
Originally Posted by The Dirt
It's not. 90% of the growth is probably in Longmont and Erie.
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This is absolutely true. Don't forget Lafayette and Louisville too. Boulder estimates that it's population cap under existing zoning and land use allowances is around 150,000.
Of course, the anti-growth camp thinks this is too much, and Boulder should impose a cap right now at the current population. The other side thinks this is too small and parts of town should be up-zoned to increase that number to 200-250,000. My biggest question is exactly
how fast that 150,000 number will be reached. Boulder can slow down that growth to some extent with things like planning board call-ups, but largely the pace of growth is up to the market. And when 150,000 is reached, is that really where it stops? or will there be economic or other pressures to go ahead and up-zone, or tap into Boulder's mysterious "planning reserve" area of open space?