Having lived in six 100-year-old homes over the last 25 years, autumn always makes me carefully consider what it takes to keep these beautiful elders operational and up-to-date. As we were going through the process of winterizing this year, I am reminded of our recent attempt to modernize by making one small addition that would connect the kitchen to the garage without going through the basement or outdoors. However, a quick look at our development by-law told me that our house is currently “legal non-compliant” because it’s built too close to the house next door. In fact, most of our neighbourhood is the same. So a simple addition along the same lines as the existing footprint is a no-go, even if my neighbours give special permission. This makes our historical housing stock seriously marginalized because it’s illegal to update.
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Sonia Hirt
Sonia Hirt
October 5, 2015 | 12:01 am
Coding for Character: Doing away with the zoned out nature of our cities
Category Community Development, Development, Economic Development, Environment | Sustainability, Legal, Planning and Design, Public Engagement, Public Policy, Resilience4 CommentsTags Andres Duany, Euclidean zoning, Fargo, form-based code, Hazel Borys, Las Cruces, Ranson West Virginia, Resilience, Sonia Hirt, sustainability, Zoned in the USA, zoning, zoning overlay, Zoning Reform