San Francisco voters recently approved a ballot measure that will require residential developments of 25 units or more to include 25% affordable units, up from the current requirement of 12%.
Proponents of the new law are hoping it will be a step forward in the effort to provide enough affordable housing in a city with some of the highest home prices and rents in the country. A grandfathering provision allows developers with completed applications to take advantage of a lower requirement depending on the date applications were approved.
Critics charged that the measure will actually reduce affordable housing because the costs of compliance would be too high to make larger projects financially possible, and developers would now focus on projects with less than 25 units. A recent San Francisco Bay Area Council survey determined that more than 33% of the Bay Area's residents are considering leaving the area due to housing costs, lengthy commuting times and the increasing cost of living.
Related Stories
Market Data | Dec 21, 2016
Will housing adjust to an aging population?
New Joint Center report projects 66% increase in senior heads of households by 2035.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 15, 2016
Multifamily tower in St. Louis uses stacked design to make every apartment a corner unit
Designed by Studio Gang, the building’s stacked tiers will each comprise four floors and fan outwards as they rise up.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 12, 2016
BIG’s first residential condominium in the U.S. completed in Miami
Two 20-story twisting towers comprise 98 units on a three-acre site near Biscayne Bay.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 1, 2016
One of Canada’s largest media companies dives into real estate development
Rogers moves forward on M City, a multi-building, multi-year project in a Toronto suburb.
Multifamily Housing | Nov 28, 2016
Axiometrics predicts apartment deliveries will peak by mid 2017
New York is projected to lead the nation next year, thanks to construction delays in 2016
Sponsored | Multifamily Housing | Nov 11, 2016
Value engineering brings Santa Barbara apartments back on track
When framing estimates for a new apartment complex in Rialto, California, came in too high, a savvy developer decided to have the project value engineered. A switch to glulam and wood-framed shear walls got the project back in the black.
Adaptive Reuse | Nov 9, 2016
Middle school transformed into affordable housing for seniors
The project received $3.8 million in public financing in exchange for constructing units for residents earning less than 60 percent of the area’s median income.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 28, 2016
Aston Martin is making a foray into real estate in Miami
The British automaker will partner with G and G Business Developments on the waterfront project.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 25, 2016
The Beacon will become the most sustainable residential tower in the world
Lumiere Developments says the building will generate enough energy to offer residents ‘Free Energy For Life.’
High-rise Construction | Sep 8, 2016
Construction on the tallest residential tower in western Europe could start early next year
China’s Greenland Group is the developer of four of the world’s 10 largest skyscrapers