There is probably another thread this can be merged into but I couldn't find one. Mods, please move if appropriate.
There is a brief article in St. Louis Public Radio about a movement to charge an additional fee when a building has a drop in unit number as part of a renovation: St. Louis is losing multifamily units. Some aldermen want to charge a conversion fee
I am still thinking through the pros and cons and don't have a strong opinion on this yet, though I think the cause-and-effect is less clear than the article implies, and I am skeptical this would result in much change in the plans for these buildings. I am also skeptical that it would result in a big bump in money going to the affordable housing trust, Alderwoman Green's suggestion for what to do with the money. It's not clear to me if this would apply to larger apartment buildings that are being rehabbed or is restricted to 2 families/4 familes.
This proposal seems to gesture towards the problem of disappearing units in desirable neighborhoods, but I don't see it resulting in more units/price points existing in those neighborhoods unless it is paired with a zoning code change that allows/encourages denser development, larger multifamily buildings, etc., over the objections of current residents regarding parking, building height, etc. I am thinking of the push back some recent multifamily housing proposals have gotten that have been discussed on this board (Skinker-Debaliviere, the Loop, Macklind, etc.) that seem to represent modest upzoning and a good way to keep the neighborhood population growing and keep a variety of price points while satisfying people's interest in having more space per unit.
Maybe once we go down to 14 wards the alders will be less interested in micromanaging every development and we will get a more robust executive agency applying more general guidelines. Alternatively, maybe the alders will delegate more power down to the neighborhood level, and we will see more neighborhoods trying to block developments.
There is a brief article in St. Louis Public Radio about a movement to charge an additional fee when a building has a drop in unit number as part of a renovation: St. Louis is losing multifamily units. Some aldermen want to charge a conversion fee
I am still thinking through the pros and cons and don't have a strong opinion on this yet, though I think the cause-and-effect is less clear than the article implies, and I am skeptical this would result in much change in the plans for these buildings. I am also skeptical that it would result in a big bump in money going to the affordable housing trust, Alderwoman Green's suggestion for what to do with the money. It's not clear to me if this would apply to larger apartment buildings that are being rehabbed or is restricted to 2 families/4 familes.
This proposal seems to gesture towards the problem of disappearing units in desirable neighborhoods, but I don't see it resulting in more units/price points existing in those neighborhoods unless it is paired with a zoning code change that allows/encourages denser development, larger multifamily buildings, etc., over the objections of current residents regarding parking, building height, etc. I am thinking of the push back some recent multifamily housing proposals have gotten that have been discussed on this board (Skinker-Debaliviere, the Loop, Macklind, etc.) that seem to represent modest upzoning and a good way to keep the neighborhood population growing and keep a variety of price points while satisfying people's interest in having more space per unit.
Maybe once we go down to 14 wards the alders will be less interested in micromanaging every development and we will get a more robust executive agency applying more general guidelines. Alternatively, maybe the alders will delegate more power down to the neighborhood level, and we will see more neighborhoods trying to block developments.








