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Policy Topics

Smart Growth:

Join the Alliance for a Livable Los Angeles

Join Housing L.A.

Building Healthy Communities 101

To sprawl or not to sprawl?

High Speed Rail AND Parks

What Do You Mean by "Affordable" Housing?

Are We Producing Enough Affordable Housing?

Encouraging Transit Villages

Condo Converters: The Problem or the Solution?

Complete Streets

Rethinking Parking

There is No Free Parking

Tips for Riding Transit

The Scourge of Free Parking

The Cost of Car Ownership

Promoting Joint Use Schools in Los Angeles

Livable Places Calls for TOD on the MTA Blue Line

"Walking to the Park" Report

 

City of Los Angeles

Proposals:

City and County Move to Update Density Bonus Laws

Including Affordable Residences in New Development

Fostering Equitable Development in Downtown L.A.

Adopted Local Ordinances:

Los Angeles Adopts Town Home Ordinance

Removing Barriers to Housing Construction on Corner Commerical Sites

Los Angeles City Council Expands Adaptive Reuse Incentives

City of Los Angeles Adopts Four New Ordinances to Spur Housing Creation

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Livable Places
634 So. Spring Street, Suite 727
Los Angeles, CA 90014
213.622.5980
213.622.3458 fax
info@livableplaces.org



 

To sprawl or not to sprawl?

The Los Angeles region is at a crossroads – sprawl has hit the wall. Our past pattern of suburban development is no longer sustainable. Building another freeway to reach new suburban housing tracts in the high desert is not the answer, but we have not yet adopted a new, smarter way of growing. Housing development has not kept pace with population growth. The result is a housing shortage with no end in sight to rising rents, rising home prices and falling vacancy rates.

Understanding that building more freeways is not the answer to traffic congestion, we have made a large public investment in rail lines and improving bus service. Between the Metro (Red, Green, Blue and Gold Lines), Metro Link and the proposed Expo Line, Los Angeles County has over 100 rail stations. However, we have not revitalized the neighborhoods around these stops by building the new homes we so desperately need.

Livable Places supports smart growth development within a half mile of rail stations and major bus lines in Los Angeles County. Our working definition of smart growth includes creating pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods with enough residences affordable to people of various incomes to support vibrant mixed-use commercial areas. Livable Places’ own developments employ high quality compact designs and green building practices, recycling underutilized industrial land and other innovative land use strategies.


Livable Places’ policy work involves:

  • Community education around creating livable places in Los Angeles County;

  • Community participation in land use planning within a half-mile of rail stations and major bus lines;

  • Removing barriers to smart growth by improving local zoning and building codes.

For more information contact Beth Steckler, Policy Director at bsteckler@livableplaces.org

Images:
1. Mixed-use block in San Diego; Photo: Ryan Lehman.
3. Willowbrook Green Apartments: Architect: Ena Dubnoff; Photo courtesy of DesignAdvisor.org.



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