Smart Growth Principles

Create a Range of Housing Opportunities and Choices

Providing quality housing for people of all income levels is an integral component in any smart growth strategy. Housing is a critical part of the way communities grow, because it constitutes a significant share of new construction and development. More importantly, however, housing availability is also a key factor in determining households' access to transportation, commuting patterns, access to services and education, and consumption of energy and other natural resources. By using smart growth approaches to create a wider range of housing choices, communities can mitigate the environmental costs of auto-dependent development, use their infrastructure resources more efficiently, ensure a better jobs-housing balance, and generate a strong foundation of support for neighborhood transit stops, commercial centers, and other services.

No single type of housing can serve the varied needs of today's diverse households. Smart growth represents an opportunity for local communities to increase housing choice not only by modifying land-use patterns on newly developed land, but also by increasing housing supply in existing neighborhoods and on land served by existing infrastructure. Integrating single- and multi-family structures in new housing developments can support a more diverse population and allow more equitable distribution of households of all income levels. The addition of units – through attached housing, accessory units, or conversion to multi-family dwellings – to existing neighborhoods creates opportunities for communities to slowly increase density without radically changing the landscape.

Adding housing can be an economic stimulus for commercial centers that are vibrant during the work day, but suffer from a lack of foot traffic and consumers during evenings or weekends. Most importantly, providing a range of housing choices allows all households to find their niche in a smart growth community – whether it is a garden apartment, a rowhouse, or a traditional single-family home.


More information from Smart Growth Network partners:

Mixed-Income Housing: Myth and Fact
http://www.uli.org/ResearchAndPublications/Reports/MixedIncome.ashx

Making the Case for Mixed Use and Mixed Income Development
www.cnt.org/repository/MICI-Exec-Summary.pdf

Energy Benefits of Urban Infill, Brownfields, and Sustainable Urban Redevelopment
www.nemw.org/images/stories/documents/energy_benefits_infill_brfds_final_12-08.pdf

Managing, Marketing and Maintaining Mixed-Income Communities
www.uli.org/sitecore/content/Report 8.aspx

Information from other sources:

Mixed-Income Housing Leads to Vibrant Neighborhoods
www.useful-community-development.org/mixed-income-housing.html


Hismen Hin-Nu Terrace, Oakland, California

Photo courtesy of Pyatok Associates