Compact cities not cure for house prices
Compact cities not cure for house prices
• Zoning restrictions increase
land supply shortages and dramatically reduce housing
affordability.
•
• Less
restrictive planning regimes in the United States and Europe
have consistently nurtured affordable housing markets for
decades.
•
• High public transit
investment is unlikely to meaningfully reduce traffic
congestion levels in the long
term.
•
(Wellington) – Local councils
looking to tackle housing affordability and congestion by
limiting land supply will only make the problem worse,
according to the latest research report from The New Zealand
Initiative.
The report, Up or Out? Examining the Trade-offs of Urban Form, comes as an increasing number of the country’s councils are in the process of adopting compact city development strategies to address high house price inflation, congestion, and declining liveability in urban areas.
The compact city ideology is built on the belief that cities should be sustainable in their use of resources. These policies take many forms, but are principally concerned with restricting the outwards spread of the urban footprint.
In short, compact cities seek to build up, instead of out.
Yet an international examination of the historical and academic record shows this planning ideology failed to deliver any meaningful improvements on these measures, and in many cases exacerbated the problems it sought to solve.
“The evidence is plain to see, especially in places like Auckland, where urban development limits and building restrictions have significantly contributed to the price of land,” said Executive Director Dr Oliver Hartwich. “Yet many councils, like Tauranga and Wellington, appear to have missed the link between land supply and housing affordability, and are pursuing their own compact city agendas.”
The report also shows that the ideology, with its focus on high public transit investment, was unlikely to meaningfully reduce traffic congestion levels due to the utility that private vehicles offer groups in society, such as working parents and those who do not work in the CBD.
Furthermore, evidence cited in the report by the US Environmental Protection Agency shows a strong relationship between high population densities, traffic, and pollution concentrations.
“We’ve seen the same trend of high house prices and congestion again and again when examining the track record of compact cities,” said Hartwich. “These are facts that are hardly ever discussed by city officials when they take their development strategies to voters, which are instead coached ‘clean-green’ platitudes. We hope this report will change that.”
The report found that:
• Zoning
restrictions have been quantifiably shown to increase land
supply shortages and dramatically reduce housing
affordability.
•
• New Zealand’s main cities
are characterised by severely unaffordable housing
markets.
•
• Far less restrictive planning
regimes in the United States and Europe have consistently
nurtured affordable housing markets for
decades.
•
• US cities that have chosen to pursue
compact development strategies tend to be more congested
than dispersed urban environments (urban areas in North
America most resemble New Zealand
cities).
•
• There is a weak relationship between
high population densities and low obesity
rates.
•
• Topology and climate have a bigger
influence over walking and cycling activity levels than
urban form.
•
• quantitative research in
Vancouver, a compact city, shows urban areas with high
walkability are exposed to significantly higher primary
pollutants than suburban
areas.
•
ends