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Liberalizing cities | From the bottom up

“Market Urbanism” refers to the synthesis of classical liberal economics and ethics (market), with an appreciation of the urban way of life and its benefits to society (urbanism). We advocate for the emergence of bottom up solutions to urban issues, as opposed to ones imposed from the top down.

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Market Urbanism MUsings September 9, 2016

September 9, 2016 By Adam Hengels

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Low slung Silicon Valley… Immune to the laws of supply and demand?

 

1. This week at Market Urbanism

Shut Out: How Land-Use Regulations Hurt the Poor by Sandy Ikeda

My colleague Emily Washington and I are reviewing the literature on how land-use regulations disproportionately raise the cost of real estate for the poor. I’d like to share a few of our findings with you.

Are States Really The Solution To Urban Mismanagement? by Matt Robare

Cities would finally have to confront their land use and economic development policies, employee compensation and infrastructure management; while states would have to confront their redistribution of revenue to rural areas. While state emergency managers and receivers have turned financially struggling cities around, it’s not hard to think that they might be needed less if cities were free.

Market Urbanism Podcast Episode 02: Emily Hamilton on Land-Use Regulation and the Cost of Housing by Nolan Gray

The question I am left pondering: how can we convince homeowners—who have a large vested interest in the current system—to support land-use liberalization? Feel free to share your thoughts on this and other topics in today’s episode in the comment section below or with Emily and I on Twitter.

Supply and Demand: A Response to 48hills by Jeff Fong

No matter what example we look at or how we cut up the data, there’s nothing out there to contradict the basic YIMBY story about supply, demand, and price. Unless, of course, you don’t actually understand the story, which may be the problem in Ms. Bronstein’s case.

2. Where’s Scott?

Scott Beyer left Texas this week for Phoenix, stop #8 on his 30-city writing tour. He has settled in the neighboring suburb of Tempe, which is home to Arizona State University and is perhaps the metro’s most intensive urban area. Scott also started a Twitter account this week, and will post his future articles there–@sbcrosscountry

3. At the Market Urbanism Facebook Group:

Neal Meyer posted photographs of Houston, “illustrating some of the subtle differences of what a city that does not have a full blown, city wide zoning ordinance is like.”

Sandy Ikeda has words about the video How to Make an Attractive City, “it’s scary how some on the left think about cities.”

Michael Lewyn has a new article responding to pro-NIMBY arguments

Matt Robare wrote, “The Open Space Trap“

Ahmed Shaker is curious, “How likely is it for people to empty the cities and return to the countryside?”

Bjorn Swenson asks, “Suppose the idea of ‘Market Urbanism’ has to be condensed to a witty bumper sticker (or similar sticker for us carless peeps) – what does the bumper sticker read?” One good answer from Michael Hamilton: “legalize cities”

via Anthony Ling: How will driverless cars and other applications of AI affect society?

via Matt Robare and Strongtowns: An Infrastructure Crisis?

via Alan Durning: How Seattle Killed Micro-Housing

via Matt Robare: ‘We’re not the Gestapo:’ Man’s war with neighborhood may cost him more than his house

via Krishan Madan: A massive 895-home development on Southern California’s coast is shot down

via Robert Stark: James Howard Kunstler: The ghastly tragedy of the suburbs

via Will Muessig, “The NYTimes has an interesting video about a de facto trailer park near LAX.”

4. Elsewhere

The Seattle-based Sightline Institute has launched an extended series called “Legalize Inexpensive Housing“

Vox on the regulations that make municipal broadband harder

5. Stephen Smith‘s tweet of the week:

Goalpost: moved! New Bay Area prog-NIMBY line: whole region must stop building new office for us to be proven wrong https://t.co/Ect53JlLGp

— Market Urbanism (@MarketUrbanism) September 4, 2016

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Filed Under: MUsings

About Adam Hengels

Adam is passionate about urbanism, and founded this site in 2007, after realizing that classical liberals and urbanists actually share many objectives, despite being at odds in many spheres of the intellectual discussion. His mission is to improve the urban experience, and overcome obstacles that prevent aspiring city dwellers from living where they want. http://www.marketurbanism.com/adam-hengels/

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