AtD wrote:
Omicron: Things to do with slums
Not me, dear.
Prince George wrote:I hope that makes it clear that I do not want "buildings full of tiny, identical dwellings" that are "built as cheaply as possible", which was an inappropriate conclusion to draw from the fact that I do not believe that the size of the apartments alone is an appropriate regulatory control, much in the same way that I also oppose parking minimums or simple height limits (rather than, say, floor-area-ratios).
My contention is that the regulations that we have are the wrong regulations. At some point we gave up on regulating the outcomes that we actually want and decided that we could only regulate various artifacts of the designs: heights, setbacks, parking spaces, and (it seems) dwelling sizes. These regulations aren't providing us with the city and buildings that we want, indeed in many cases they are actively preventing it.
Wise words, Your Highness.
Will wrote:
I think it is superficial to say there is a market for these tiny apartments.
The concept of a market implies that people have a choice. The people that will buy these apartments would do so, not because they want to live there but because that is the only choice they have. If people had a choice, they would prefer to live in something bigger.
I am uncomfortable with the idea of living in a society which shoves its lower income people into human filling cabinets. Australia is better than that.
Of course choice is limited by money. But that's the same for everything. Some buyers of small cars would probably like to have something bigger; buyers of old cars would like something newer and safer; but that doesn't mean everyone in old small cars is entitled to have a new, large one or that there's no-one who likes small cars.
In any case, I'm not seeing this forced shoving of poor people into shoeboxes. At the absolute bottom-end of the metro Adelaide market, you can have an old 2-bed maisonette miles and miles out of town surrounded by much of the same, or you can have a little apartment in the CBD opposite the Central Market. To me, the mix of cheap, middling and pricey property that is available in the CBD offers a much, much better outcome for low-income people than whole suburbs of low-income housing replicated over and over again - the services and infrastructure have to cater for everyone instead of setting the bar way down at the lowest common denominator.
If increased home ownership is desired under the $150k-ish floor that the smallest of existing apartments currently sell for (or more choice offered to buyers in this range), then size has to go down. The location is so good that trade-offs have to be made somewhere, and in my view, the fact that these apartments are larger than most of the hotel rooms in the Currie St proposal means that the apparent size sacrifice isn't as horrendous as it sounds - that is, if we'd happily pay good money to stay in something smaller, it's not at all impossible to envisage that people wouldn't mind paying a low entry price to live nearby, too.
Here's a floor-plan of part of the second floor, including the smallest of the proposed apartments:
I'm not seeing anything overly disastrous here. Definitely small, and I probably wouldn't have bothered with the walls to the bedroom, but the balconies make a big difference. For a single, I simply do not see why this cannot be offered to market.