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Neural Foundry's avatar

The 800m station radius policy is clever but I wonder if it inadvertently creates value capture problems at scale. If every well-connected station suddenly becomes a high-density development zone, won't land speculators front-run this and capture most of the uplift before councils can negotiate Section 106 deals? The New Zealand comparison is useful, but Auckland's rail network is way less extensive than the UKs, so the land value dynamics might play out diferently. Also worth noting that requiring 40-50 dph minimums is solid in theory but enforcement will be tricky when developers lobby for loopholes.

Terravoir's avatar

I’m from California living in London now and been saying would love to see ADU law implemented here!

The state basically forced cities to allow ADUs by right on single-family lots (R-1 / RD-1.5 etc.). Once SB 1069, AB 68 / AB 881, and SB 13 came in, every lot could add at least one ADU (and often a JADU), with basically over the counter plan check, relaxed setbacks, parking waivers near transit, and guaranteed minimum sizes (e.g. up to ~800 sq ft even if local rules said otherwise).

What happened next was interesting. As soon as ADU sizes increased and approvals became predictable, people started converting garages, carports, and tuck-unders at scale. Those projects suddenly pencilled, which meant owners were willing to put real capex into buildings that had been neglected for decades.

A side effect people don’t talk about enough: a lot of those tuck-under conversions triggered soft-story seismic retrofits. In places like LA and the Bay Area, buildings that were too expensive to retrofit before suddenly became worth fixing because there was rental income on the other side. Neighbourhoods didn’t just get denser — they got nicer looking and safer.

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