Which Housing Is "Housing Crisis Housing"?
Which Housing Is "Housing Crisis Housing"?Remembering that some small communities grow on their own termsSometimes I spot a scene out my car window that would make a perfect photograph. On my drive to Winchester a few months ago, I passed a new subdivision a bit east of the small Virginia city. In front of it was a pasture full of cows. If there had been a wide shoulder to pull over, that would be the cover image for this piece. I don’t know where exactly that was, but it was definitely closer to Winchester than any place you think of as being part of the D.C. suburbs (unless you think of Winchester that way, which apparently some people do.) And yet, all the way out here, there’s this new housing going up. “How far away is the D.C.-area housing crisis pushing new construction?” I always think when I see this. Townhouses and faux downtowns in Gaithersburg, Maryland and even further out. Mixed-use development in Gainesville, Virginia. That’s pretty much without question a symptom of a housing crunch emanating from the urban core and inner suburbs. Some people dispute this, arguing that this construction is occurring out there because people want to live there, maybe with some elements of urban life but with more privacy and peace and quiet. Yes—some people affirmatively choose this exurban development. But many are effectively pushed into it: the old “drive till you qualify.” We do not permit our older neighborhoods to grow enough to actually let people vote with their feet and show us what a natural settlement pattern would look like. High prices indicate high demand. It may be an inference rather than an absolute fact that this exurban housing results from the housing crisis, but it is a pretty direct and simple one. You hear it from people, too. For example:
But I’ve had another thought, observing new housing developments outside Winchester, or outside Charlotte Hall, Maryland. Maybe this is housing for these places. The pervasive fact of a housing shortage in my own metro area, perhaps, has led me to see all housing as symptomatic of that crisis, to the point where it hasn’t occurred to me that other places, without a housing crunch per se, might also be growing naturally, for themselves, on their own terms. This is a subtle point. I’m so used to observing older neighborhoods frozen by outdated zoning codes, forcing “their” development out into the countryside, that I’ve started to view new housing outside of cities or established neighborhoods as artificial, in the sense that it would not exist in the absence of regulatory constraints against development. I view it, in a sense, as a necessary evil: the necessary part being the housing itself, the evil part being the location. But this overlooks the fact that towns and less settled areas outside of the big metro areas are still “places” which might be growing apart from the urban and suburban housing crises. The fact that it often takes the form of greenfield suburban development is simply because it’s happening now, at a time when we build like that. I’m still thinking through this. What is your impression, if you’re familiar with any of this, as to how far you have to go from the urban core before the housing market returns to ”normal,” and where you can assume you’re not seeing far-flung bedroom communities effectively transposed from their “proper” place closer to the city? This is an economic question, but also a sociological one. Are the cows in front of tract houses a symptom of the housing crisis? Or not? Leave a comment! Related Reading: Talk Notes: Traffic and Crowding Not-Pennsylvania Amish Country You're currently a free subscriber to The Deleted Scenes. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
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