Quote:
Originally Posted by jaxg8r1
There have been numerous reports about how development is slowing down and how the affordable housing provisions are not delivering the units needed. Most of the buildings under construction now went through the permitting/review/design process years ago.
The reality is for more affordable housing, either supply needs to go way up or demand needs to go way down. I'm guessing demand isn't going to go down anytime soon but roadblocks to creating supply will definitely causes pricing pressures to escalate. That is what is so insanely frustrating about this and other asinine Portland policies. We are well on our way to becoming a boutique city where people in skyscrapers demand the city not allow other people to live in skyscrapers next door for silly reasons.
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Yeah, with the sheer amount of housing coming online in the Slabtown District, I'm not even remotely worried about it. Discounts have already started to appear, and most of those buildings aren't even open yet.
If the only way we can get affordable housing is to overbuild luxury housing during a boom, have the owners go bankrupt when the boom turns to bust, and then have those apartment buildings spiral downward, then we're doing it wrong.
In my mind, the only value the developer really adds is the kind of coordination that this one failed to pull off. The design, architecture, building, and financing is all the work other people. So I'm not particularly sympathetic to the claim that a developer finds it hard to coordinate work in Portland.