Max Nardo
@maxnardoco.bsky.social
I like plants and work on housing and sustainable land use in Colorado
As Colorado cities consider their next moves, Portland shows how zoning reform can deliver more homes and more choices through gentle incremental housing development.
Check out the blog ⬇️
Check out the blog ⬇️
Expanding Housing Choices in Colorado
Smaller homes on smaller lots delivering options and affordability in Portland…
housingforwardco.org
June 20, 2025 at 4:57 PM
As Colorado cities consider their next moves, Portland shows how zoning reform can deliver more homes and more choices through gentle incremental housing development.
Check out the blog ⬇️
Check out the blog ⬇️
The big concerns? Overdevelopment, neighborhood character, displacement.
The outcomes so far?
✅Steady, modest production
✅Distributed across neighborhoods
✅No overconcentration in areas vulnerable to displacement
✅No increase in demolitions, and >2x as many homes built per demolition
The outcomes so far?
✅Steady, modest production
✅Distributed across neighborhoods
✅No overconcentration in areas vulnerable to displacement
✅No increase in demolitions, and >2x as many homes built per demolition
June 20, 2025 at 4:56 PM
The big concerns? Overdevelopment, neighborhood character, displacement.
The outcomes so far?
✅Steady, modest production
✅Distributed across neighborhoods
✅No overconcentration in areas vulnerable to displacement
✅No increase in demolitions, and >2x as many homes built per demolition
The outcomes so far?
✅Steady, modest production
✅Distributed across neighborhoods
✅No overconcentration in areas vulnerable to displacement
✅No increase in demolitions, and >2x as many homes built per demolition
Portland legalized smaller homes—like duplexes, triplexes, and cottage clusters—on most residential lots. 3 years in, this shift has led to hundreds of new homes per year in walkable neighborhoods, selling for $100s of thousands less than single detached houses.
June 20, 2025 at 4:52 PM
Portland legalized smaller homes—like duplexes, triplexes, and cottage clusters—on most residential lots. 3 years in, this shift has led to hundreds of new homes per year in walkable neighborhoods, selling for $100s of thousands less than single detached houses.