No, it would only ban zoning that allows only single family homes, as zoning laws often do now. It would not require multifamily homes. The article points out that similar laws in California so far have resulted only in limited change to home building.
solarmist is suggesting the title sounds like zoning now forbids single-family houses, whereas it actually bans requiring single-family houses (ie them being the only type of residence allowed).
I thought that's what "single-family zoning" means: a requirement to have nothing else besides single family houses. Eliminating this category of zoning means you can no longer mandate "only single family houses".
I'm unsure if zoning laws behave radically differently, but I'm thinking the best model is what they have in Japan:
To someone not familiar with the technical meaning "bill banning single-family zoning" reads like "a bill which imposes a ban on allowing you to build single-family houses".
It absolutely can, as evidenced by several comments here.
As a second example. If you tell people that an object is inflammable. I would except that some non-negligible portion of people to assume that the object is not flammable.
“ The Washington state House of Representatives late Monday passed a bill that would legalize duplexes or fourplexes in almost every neighborhood of every city in Washington, potentially bringing an end to local zoning rules that limit large swaths of cities to only single-family homes.”
This is to increase the housing supply. It looks like it is simply going to erase the distinction between single-unit and multiple-unit residential zoning so that developers could put in either in any area designated as residential.
this would still need to pass the Senate and similar bills have failed to pass in recent years.
i think developers have deeper pockets to take low density land/property and redevelop it where it makes economic sense, no? the only low density housing that beat as pricepoint condos are Manors in the millions, but those are a minority of housing.
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[ 3.7 ms ] story [ 52.4 ms ] threadDirect link to bill page: https://app.leg.wa.gov/billsummary?BillNumber=1110&Year=2023...
I'm unsure if zoning laws behave radically differently, but I'm thinking the best model is what they have in Japan:
http://urbankchoze.blogspot.com/2014/04/japanese-zoning.html
Things that can only be built in "low rise residential" zones can still be built in "neighborhood commercial", etc. See chart:
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-sV5ETXDs_8M/Ux-axBTuF2I/AAAAAAAAAs...
As a second example. If you tell people that an object is inflammable. I would except that some non-negligible portion of people to assume that the object is not flammable.
“ The Washington state House of Representatives late Monday passed a bill that would legalize duplexes or fourplexes in almost every neighborhood of every city in Washington, potentially bringing an end to local zoning rules that limit large swaths of cities to only single-family homes.”
This is to increase the housing supply. It looks like it is simply going to erase the distinction between single-unit and multiple-unit residential zoning so that developers could put in either in any area designated as residential.
this would still need to pass the Senate and similar bills have failed to pass in recent years.
it would be great state wide though