#162 Summer 2010 — Public Housing Privatization

Little Living Goes a Long Way

As Seattle continues its efforts to expand its affordable housing stock (and housing options), tiny so-called cottages are popping up in its backyards. The city recently changed its zoning rules […]

As Seattle continues its efforts to expand its affordable housing stock (and housing options), tiny so-called cottages are popping up in its backyards. The city recently changed its zoning rules to allow these cottages to be built in single-family neighborhoods. It also rejected a proposed cap of 50 cottages per year. The move helped spark a design competition for reasonably priced plans. Seattle’s cottages are certainly less isolated than the tiny houses we started seeing a few years back popping up on the prairie in Texas, some as small as 12 by 16 feet, but they produce similar results: reasonably priced units at a space premium.

Indeed, living small is apparently catching on. In Southern California, known for its sprawl, the Los Angeles Times reports that RV-sized apartments, replete with innovative design that allows for central air, high ceilings, and other modern amenities, are allowing people to live in their neighborhoods of choice without spending market-rate rent. There’s even something of a national trend afoot: the U.S. Census Bureau shows that the median size of a U.S. home, which skyrocketed from 900 square feet in the 1950s to 2,277 in 2007, has begun to wane — down to 2,161. Not tiny living yet, by any means, but maybe it’s a start in that direction.

OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE

  • An orange tinted bridge over water in New Brunswick, New Jersey.

    A Battle for Wards in New Jersey’s Hub City

    October 17, 2010

    How an organization of residents crossing age, race, and socioeconomic lines took on an unyielding City Hall known for quelling grass-roots efforts and (almost) overtook the political party machinery.

  • A worker at Evergreen Cooperative Laundry, which recently secured new contracts for 3 million pounds of health care linens.

    Green Jobs with Roots

    October 17, 2010

    For the founders of Cleveland's Evergreen Coops, putting a handful of people to work at minimum wage isn't worth it. They are aiming at nothing less than a ground-up economic transformation -- one owned by the very people it's intended to help.

  • Taking Foreclosures to Task

    October 17, 2010

    All across the country, local governments, CDCs, community groups, and housing counselors are coming together to address the foreclosure crisis.