Quote:
Originally Posted by mhays
The majority of people will vote yes for transit (depending on the measure), and will vote yes for limits to sprawl if given the opportunity (and depending on the measure). From there, if you can get the discussion away from "should we stop growing" and closer to "how should we deal with our inevitable growth without sprawling and ideally near transit" you have a recipe for smoother infill.
Then you need zoning that allows signficant density in key areas, and land use permit decisions that are based upon zoning vs. one with arbitrary veto powers.
My region isn't perfect either, but we've done these things, and don't run into cases like the Highlands example assuming the plan is within the zoning, or close to it with non-controversial variances.
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I think a lot of the current issues come down to the designations of "areas of change" versus "areas of stability" when the new Blueprint Denver and zoning code was released. People took to heart that "area of stability" meant zero changes, when in fact it meant that the new zoning would still remain similar to the previous zoning with no significant
land use changes.
These areas such as Highlands were already zoned for the townhome style construction that is ongoing, it was just 10 years ago this neighborhood, and other inner city areas like it, weren't desirable enough to warrant heavy investment and development like they are today. People moved in with the mindset that the area would never change, and now that it is, they seem to take it as a personal affront and try to bully to keep their neighborhood the same. What they also don't understand is that stagnation is also bad for their property values.
I would bet that a majority of those that have such big issues with the development going on have not lived there for more than 10 years, and moved from the suburbs, and had some preconceived notion of keeping their neighborhood suburban-esque with nearby urban amenities, even though they live within a mile of downtown.