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YIMBYYay t1_jd2u31j wrote

The problem is that it isn’t rational in Pittsburgh. And what exactly do you support? Less and more expensive housing? Because that’s what’s the city is serving up.

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ktxhopem3276 t1_jd316gy wrote

Lefty activists aren’t against development in most cases in Pittsburgh. Most of the anti development campaigns are just neighborhood nimbys and sometime worse, landlords astroturfing to reduce competition.

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YIMBYYay t1_jd34t1u wrote

It's a mixed bag, and many of the NIMBYs are in the DSA/activist circles. Even those not outright anti-development advocate for policies and requirements that make building more time-consuming and expensive without considering the negative impacts. Take a look at the zoning code sometimes; there are some wildly impractical requirements that you can tell no architect or engineer, or even attorney, had any hand in writing.

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ktxhopem3276 t1_jd382td wrote

Yeah I agree. With so many people in the room, the end product ends up as a strained compromise that looks nothing like what anybody wants. It’s just so hard to trust the developers to do the right thing. Look at how the news segment uses the old renderings for walnut capitals Oakland crossing project. The current project looks nothing like the pictures they showed originally and people are going to shit a brick when they see that thing built. They got an exception to build a 400 foot long building when they were showing two separate buildings for a long time. I though it was very important urban design principle to not build monolithic super-blocks like this building. The zoning only slows 250 feet which is the average block size in the area. Walnut capital gets whatever they want from the city and I can’t think of a zoning variance they didn’t get so it’s just obnoxious of them and shows how entitled they have become to getting their own way. I can just never tell what is reasonable to bring down costs of housing and what is a profit grab

https://www.bizjournals.com/pittsburgh/news/2023/03/01/oakland-crossing-walnut-capital-zoning-plan.html

https://nextpittsburgh.com/city-design/how-one-pittsburgh-developer-wants-to-fix-oaklands-dead-zone/

https://www.utimes.pitt.edu/news/oakland-crossings-what-it

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burritoace t1_jd77sgh wrote

If there aren't specific rent caps associated with a project then it's a profit grab

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ktxhopem3276 t1_jd849aj wrote

Everything is a profit grab in a capitalist economy. I think putting up barriers to constructing new housing serves to benefit existing landlords. I disagree with anything that makes it harder or more expensive to build more housing. More supply will lower prices. There is localized gentrification when developers build new expensive housing. I worry about low wage workers being pushed further away from employment and good transit. Requiring developers to provide a percentage of housing for low wage workers is possibly a good solution but it may lead to a little less housing being built overall.

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Moogottrrgr t1_jd2zdpv wrote

You think trickle-down economics improved the world too, huh?

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YIMBYYay t1_jd2zr36 wrote

No. I believe that you can’t address the housing crisis by making it more time consuming and expensive to build and constraining the supply of housing.

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Moogottrrgr t1_jd31gw7 wrote

By allowing rich developers to replace affordable houses with giant unaffordable apartments in the hopes that someday they will become slums?

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YIMBYYay t1_jd32i15 wrote

Where in Pittsburgh have affordable houses been knocked down to make way for new apartments?

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Moogottrrgr t1_jd337rm wrote

Oh, you must have never been to East Liberty. Sorry.

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LostEnroute t1_jd4fdm2 wrote

The stories about the buildings coming down are a lot louder than the ones about new affordable housing being built.

Every unit that was demolished in for Whole Foods has been replaced with new builds basically across the street. Did you know that?

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Moogottrrgr t1_jd6169j wrote

And where did the people from all the projects go? What about the people living down the street in those cheap apartments on Negley? How many years of negotiations and regulations did it take to get those places replaced, or did the developers do that out of the goodness of their hearts?

Are you honestly trying to tell me that if we just let developers do whatever the hell they wanted, those houses would exist?

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LostEnroute t1_jd7n2ff wrote

>Are you honestly trying to tell me that if we just let developers do whatever the hell they wanted, those houses would exist?

Of course they wouldn't exist. I never said that and I agree with holding developers accountable! I just don't think the public realizes how much that actually happens. East Liberty is full of affordable housing and luxury housing. It's a success story.

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Moogottrrgr t1_jd7y1tp wrote

This whole thread is full of people insisting that holding developers accountable is going to hinder the growth of affordable housing. I also know a LOT of people who don't consider East Liberty a success story. There's an entire documentary series (East of Liberty) about it.

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LostEnroute t1_jd85b38 wrote

Neighborhoods go through transition and I think East Liberty's latest is balanced, considering.

I know the bitter documentary, if it was ever finally pieced together into one. I'm just glad there are less murders and street prostitutes near my home.

Walking the .75 miles from downtown East Liberty to my home was absolutely not a good idea 20 years ago.

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Moogottrrgr t1_jd891zj wrote

East Liberty has been a huge success for a middle-aged white lady like me. I agree. I just do not feel good about it.

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burritoace t1_jd77ukm wrote

It doesn't seem like that's what they are trying to tell you

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YIMBYYay t1_jd33yxv wrote

East Liberty has more below-market housing units now than when the abysmal towers were there. No housing was torn down to make way for the "luxury" apartments.

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Moogottrrgr t1_jd34nog wrote

Please have the lobbyist who pays you to make these posts provide you with actual data from an impartial source you can share.

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