Policy case study
ADU Policy Paper (Housing, New Avery)
A housing policy analysis focused on accessory dwelling units (ADUs) as an incremental supply strategy, including zoning barriers, stakeholder tradeoffs, and what implementation needs to look like.
Problem
Housing shortages persist while many residential lots are underutilized. Zoning and permitting rules often block small-scale additions that could increase supply without major neighborhood disruption.
Context
- Political tension: housing need vs. neighborhood concerns (parking, density, character).
- Administrative friction: complex approvals can make ADUs too expensive or slow to build.
- Equity: without design, benefits can skew toward higher-income homeowners with capital access.
Analysis
- ADUs are a “small wins” lever: they won’t solve supply alone but can meaningfully expand options over time.
- Rules shape participation: setbacks, owner-occupancy, and parking requirements heavily influence adoption.
- Cost is the constraint: financing access and permitting speed are often bigger blockers than demand.
- Implementation matters: cities need clear guides, predictable timelines, and support for compliant builds.
Recommendation
- Simplify and standardize permitting (clear checklist + predictable timeline).
- Reduce barriers where possible (review parking rules, streamline design constraints).
- Pair reform with equity supports (technical assistance, financing options, fee transparency).
- Track outcomes (permits issued, build completion, affordability, and neighborhood impacts).
Why it matters
ADU policy is a practical test of whether housing reform can be both pro-supply and equity-aware. Good implementation increases options, supports multigenerational living, and reduces pressure on rents over time.
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