The Tribune article comes with a very interesting database with a search function that allows you to look up all zoning changes in a given ward for the past five years or so.
Quote:
Originally Posted by the urban politician
What we're seeing here is just the typical city-wide reaction against new development, the usual whining that never stops, and the Tribune appears to have sided with NIMBY's. I agree with its criticism of Aldermanic prerogative, but for a different reason. They criticize Aldermanic prerogative because Alderman are cozy with developers; I criticize it because it allows small numbers of outspoken individuals to overpower the people who should be overseeing development: the Planning Dept.
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First, much of the upzoning discussed in the article leads to a DECREASE in density--multiple lots or three-flats being replaced with a single gargantuan single-family home. Moreover, lots that never used to have parking suddenly have to have eight-car garages that alone are the size of the houses they replaced. This practice does not promote density.
Second, there is no shortage of vacant land and underutilized lots in this city. If developers were encouraged to build on those, we might start seeing development spread outside the extremely narrow northern corridor to which it is confined.
Third, the planners themselves often recommend against zoning changes because they create unpredictable density levels and blocks with no defined character. People don't want to live in a place like that.
Fourth, well, people don't want to live in places like that. Note the story about the family on N. Sacramento that has to deal with a developer building condos on either side of their house--despite the fact that the already-completed condo building on one side has had no buyers!
Fifth, the city had the option of promoting new development in areas that have plenty of transit capacity, like around Lake Street. It elected to allow aldermen to promote it instead in areas with already crushing density of transit trips, taxing the existing infrastructure.
The city could have stuck with a pretty tried-and-true zoning system. Arterial streets with high density and a mixture of uses, residential streets for those with a little more to spend who value quietness and light. Instead it has allowed this zoning anarchy, which only encourages people to invest little in their communities, since they have no way of knowing whether they will have any interest in living in them in the future.