Escaping the Housing Trap: The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis
Gespeichert in:
Beteilige Person: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Newark
John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated
2024
|
Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
Links: | https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/hwr/detail.action?docID=31284615 |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Umfang: | 1 Online-Ressource (243 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781394198306 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Escaping the Housing Trap |b The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
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505 | 8 | |a Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part I Housing as Investment -- Chapter 1 Is Housing Shelter or an Investment? -- Who Benefits from High Housing Prices? -- Understanding the Housing Market -- Can Housing Prices Go Down? -- Chapter 2 Building the Trap -- Understanding the Traditional Development Pattern -- The Progressive Movement's Housing Reforms -- Housing Becomes a Financial Product -- Stabilized and Ready to Grow -- Chapter 3 Setting the Trap -- Mechanical Permanence as an Antidote to Organic Messiness -- The First Generation of America's Suburban Experiment -- The Second-Generation Implications of Permanence -- The Trap Starts to Close -- The Savings and Loan Bubble -- Chapter 4 Trapped -- The Subprime Crisis -- The Road to Recovery? -- What Comes Next? -- Part II Housing as Shelter -- Chapter 5 Zoning Lockdown -- The Illegal City of Somerville -- The Roots of American Zoning -- The Birth and Death of the Triple-Decker -- The "Lodger Evil" -- Residential Hotels / SROs -- Zoning as a Tool of Economic Exclusion -- Zoning and the FHA -- Locking Down the Core Cities -- Downzoned and Pushed Out -- Build and No-Build Zones -- The Missing Middle -- Did Zoning Cause the Housing Shortage? -- Can We Escape from Zoning Lockdown? -- Chapter 6 Not in My Backyard -- Who Are the NIMBYs? -- How the Suburban Experiment Created the NIMBY -- Incentives in the Driving City -- The Outsized Power of No -- Homevoters versus the Growth Machine (Spoiler: They Both Win) -- The New Battle over "Local Control" -- Reclaiming the Banner of Community Empowerment -- Chapter 7 Yes! In My Backyard -- The Start of a Movement -- One Neat Trick -- Does "Build Build Build" Offer an Escape from the Housing Crisis? -- Big YIMBY Question #1: (How) Does Supply Matter? -- Housing as Six Degrees of Separation -- The Importance of Vacancy Rates | |
505 | 8 | |a Try YIMBY™ Today! (*Your Local Experience May Vary) -- Big YIMBY Question #2: How Do We Get a Housing Revolution? -- Successes That Scale -- Chapter 8 Affordable with a Capital "A" -- How Los Angeles "Lost" 111,000 Affordable Housing Units -- The "Affordable" System in the US -- Public Housing -- Housing Vouchers -- Inclusionary Zoning -- The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit -- Removing Housing from the Speculative Market -- Social Housing: Public Housing 2.0? -- A Parallel Option, Not a Panacea -- Part III Housing in a Strong Town -- Chapter 9 A System That Produces a Solution -- A Paradigm Shift toward Complexity -- The Principles of a New Approach to Housing -- No Neighborhood Can Be Exempt from Change -- No Neighborhood Should Experience Radical Change -- There Must Be a Low Bar of Entry to Obtaining Housing -- Housing Must Be Part of a Neighborhood-level Economic Ecosystem -- Public Infrastructure Investments Must Focus on Where People Struggle to Use the City as It Has Been Built -- Maintaining a Sense of Urgency -- Chapter 10 Releasing the Swarm -- Building an Incremental Development Culture: The South Bend Experiment -- "Find Your Farm" -- Growing an Intentionally Inclusive Developer Community -- Cities Built by Many Hands -- The Incremental Developer's Business Model -- Incremental Development as "Gentlefication" -- It Takes a "Swarm" -- How Cities Can Support the Growth of Incremental Development -- Not "Does It Scale?" but "Does It Replicate?" -- Chapter 11 Financing a Housing Revolution -- Buffer from the Distorting Boom -- Repurposing Empty Bedrooms -- Financing Backyard Cottages -- Getting Capital off the Sidelines -- Financing Small Developers -- Transforming Entire Neighborhoods -- Aligning Local Tax Policy -- Chapter 12 Building a Strong Town -- References -- Index -- EULA. | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | |
any_adam_object | |
author | Marohn, Charles L., Jr |
author_facet | Marohn, Charles L., Jr |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Marohn, Charles L., Jr |
author_variant | c l j m clj cljm |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV050102281 |
collection | ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part I Housing as Investment -- Chapter 1 Is Housing Shelter or an Investment? -- Who Benefits from High Housing Prices? -- Understanding the Housing Market -- Can Housing Prices Go Down? -- Chapter 2 Building the Trap -- Understanding the Traditional Development Pattern -- The Progressive Movement's Housing Reforms -- Housing Becomes a Financial Product -- Stabilized and Ready to Grow -- Chapter 3 Setting the Trap -- Mechanical Permanence as an Antidote to Organic Messiness -- The First Generation of America's Suburban Experiment -- The Second-Generation Implications of Permanence -- The Trap Starts to Close -- The Savings and Loan Bubble -- Chapter 4 Trapped -- The Subprime Crisis -- The Road to Recovery? -- What Comes Next? -- Part II Housing as Shelter -- Chapter 5 Zoning Lockdown -- The Illegal City of Somerville -- The Roots of American Zoning -- The Birth and Death of the Triple-Decker -- The "Lodger Evil" -- Residential Hotels / SROs -- Zoning as a Tool of Economic Exclusion -- Zoning and the FHA -- Locking Down the Core Cities -- Downzoned and Pushed Out -- Build and No-Build Zones -- The Missing Middle -- Did Zoning Cause the Housing Shortage? -- Can We Escape from Zoning Lockdown? -- Chapter 6 Not in My Backyard -- Who Are the NIMBYs? -- How the Suburban Experiment Created the NIMBY -- Incentives in the Driving City -- The Outsized Power of No -- Homevoters versus the Growth Machine (Spoiler: They Both Win) -- The New Battle over "Local Control" -- Reclaiming the Banner of Community Empowerment -- Chapter 7 Yes! In My Backyard -- The Start of a Movement -- One Neat Trick -- Does "Build Build Build" Offer an Escape from the Housing Crisis? -- Big YIMBY Question #1: (How) Does Supply Matter? -- Housing as Six Degrees of Separation -- The Importance of Vacancy Rates Try YIMBY™ Today! (*Your Local Experience May Vary) -- Big YIMBY Question #2: How Do We Get a Housing Revolution? -- Successes That Scale -- Chapter 8 Affordable with a Capital "A" -- How Los Angeles "Lost" 111,000 Affordable Housing Units -- The "Affordable" System in the US -- Public Housing -- Housing Vouchers -- Inclusionary Zoning -- The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit -- Removing Housing from the Speculative Market -- Social Housing: Public Housing 2.0? -- A Parallel Option, Not a Panacea -- Part III Housing in a Strong Town -- Chapter 9 A System That Produces a Solution -- A Paradigm Shift toward Complexity -- The Principles of a New Approach to Housing -- No Neighborhood Can Be Exempt from Change -- No Neighborhood Should Experience Radical Change -- There Must Be a Low Bar of Entry to Obtaining Housing -- Housing Must Be Part of a Neighborhood-level Economic Ecosystem -- Public Infrastructure Investments Must Focus on Where People Struggle to Use the City as It Has Been Built -- Maintaining a Sense of Urgency -- Chapter 10 Releasing the Swarm -- Building an Incremental Development Culture: The South Bend Experiment -- "Find Your Farm" -- Growing an Intentionally Inclusive Developer Community -- Cities Built by Many Hands -- The Incremental Developer's Business Model -- Incremental Development as "Gentlefication" -- It Takes a "Swarm" -- How Cities Can Support the Growth of Incremental Development -- Not "Does It Scale?" but "Does It Replicate?" -- Chapter 11 Financing a Housing Revolution -- Buffer from the Distorting Boom -- Repurposing Empty Bedrooms -- Financing Backyard Cottages -- Getting Capital off the Sidelines -- Financing Small Developers -- Transforming Entire Neighborhoods -- Aligning Local Tax Policy -- Chapter 12 Building a Strong Town -- References -- Index -- EULA. |
ctrlnum | (ZDB-30-PQE)EBC31284615 (ZDB-30-PAD)EBC31284615 (ZDB-89-EBL)EBL31284615 (OCoLC)1432587515 (DE-599)BVBBV050102281 |
dewey-full | 363.580973 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 363 - Other social problems and services |
dewey-raw | 363.580973 |
dewey-search | 363.580973 |
dewey-sort | 3363.580973 |
dewey-tens | 360 - Social problems and services; associations |
discipline | Soziologie |
edition | 1st ed |
format | Electronic eBook |
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illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2025-01-11T15:46:08Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781394198306 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-035439443 |
oclc_num | 1432587515 |
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owner_facet | DE-2070s |
physical | 1 Online-Ressource (243 Seiten) |
psigel | ZDB-30-PQE ZDB-30-PQE HWR_PDA_PQE |
publishDate | 2024 |
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publisher | John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated |
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spelling | Marohn, Charles L., Jr Verfasser aut Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis 1st ed Newark John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated 2024 ©2024 1 Online-Ressource (243 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part I Housing as Investment -- Chapter 1 Is Housing Shelter or an Investment? -- Who Benefits from High Housing Prices? -- Understanding the Housing Market -- Can Housing Prices Go Down? -- Chapter 2 Building the Trap -- Understanding the Traditional Development Pattern -- The Progressive Movement's Housing Reforms -- Housing Becomes a Financial Product -- Stabilized and Ready to Grow -- Chapter 3 Setting the Trap -- Mechanical Permanence as an Antidote to Organic Messiness -- The First Generation of America's Suburban Experiment -- The Second-Generation Implications of Permanence -- The Trap Starts to Close -- The Savings and Loan Bubble -- Chapter 4 Trapped -- The Subprime Crisis -- The Road to Recovery? -- What Comes Next? -- Part II Housing as Shelter -- Chapter 5 Zoning Lockdown -- The Illegal City of Somerville -- The Roots of American Zoning -- The Birth and Death of the Triple-Decker -- The "Lodger Evil" -- Residential Hotels / SROs -- Zoning as a Tool of Economic Exclusion -- Zoning and the FHA -- Locking Down the Core Cities -- Downzoned and Pushed Out -- Build and No-Build Zones -- The Missing Middle -- Did Zoning Cause the Housing Shortage? -- Can We Escape from Zoning Lockdown? -- Chapter 6 Not in My Backyard -- Who Are the NIMBYs? -- How the Suburban Experiment Created the NIMBY -- Incentives in the Driving City -- The Outsized Power of No -- Homevoters versus the Growth Machine (Spoiler: They Both Win) -- The New Battle over "Local Control" -- Reclaiming the Banner of Community Empowerment -- Chapter 7 Yes! In My Backyard -- The Start of a Movement -- One Neat Trick -- Does "Build Build Build" Offer an Escape from the Housing Crisis? -- Big YIMBY Question #1: (How) Does Supply Matter? -- Housing as Six Degrees of Separation -- The Importance of Vacancy Rates Try YIMBY™ Today! (*Your Local Experience May Vary) -- Big YIMBY Question #2: How Do We Get a Housing Revolution? -- Successes That Scale -- Chapter 8 Affordable with a Capital "A" -- How Los Angeles "Lost" 111,000 Affordable Housing Units -- The "Affordable" System in the US -- Public Housing -- Housing Vouchers -- Inclusionary Zoning -- The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit -- Removing Housing from the Speculative Market -- Social Housing: Public Housing 2.0? -- A Parallel Option, Not a Panacea -- Part III Housing in a Strong Town -- Chapter 9 A System That Produces a Solution -- A Paradigm Shift toward Complexity -- The Principles of a New Approach to Housing -- No Neighborhood Can Be Exempt from Change -- No Neighborhood Should Experience Radical Change -- There Must Be a Low Bar of Entry to Obtaining Housing -- Housing Must Be Part of a Neighborhood-level Economic Ecosystem -- Public Infrastructure Investments Must Focus on Where People Struggle to Use the City as It Has Been Built -- Maintaining a Sense of Urgency -- Chapter 10 Releasing the Swarm -- Building an Incremental Development Culture: The South Bend Experiment -- "Find Your Farm" -- Growing an Intentionally Inclusive Developer Community -- Cities Built by Many Hands -- The Incremental Developer's Business Model -- Incremental Development as "Gentlefication" -- It Takes a "Swarm" -- How Cities Can Support the Growth of Incremental Development -- Not "Does It Scale?" but "Does It Replicate?" -- Chapter 11 Financing a Housing Revolution -- Buffer from the Distorting Boom -- Repurposing Empty Bedrooms -- Financing Backyard Cottages -- Getting Capital off the Sidelines -- Financing Small Developers -- Transforming Entire Neighborhoods -- Aligning Local Tax Policy -- Chapter 12 Building a Strong Town -- References -- Index -- EULA. Herriges, Daniel Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Marohn, Charles L., Jr Escaping the Housing Trap Newark : John Wiley & Sons, Incorporated,c2024 9781119984528 |
spellingShingle | Marohn, Charles L., Jr Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- Part I Housing as Investment -- Chapter 1 Is Housing Shelter or an Investment? -- Who Benefits from High Housing Prices? -- Understanding the Housing Market -- Can Housing Prices Go Down? -- Chapter 2 Building the Trap -- Understanding the Traditional Development Pattern -- The Progressive Movement's Housing Reforms -- Housing Becomes a Financial Product -- Stabilized and Ready to Grow -- Chapter 3 Setting the Trap -- Mechanical Permanence as an Antidote to Organic Messiness -- The First Generation of America's Suburban Experiment -- The Second-Generation Implications of Permanence -- The Trap Starts to Close -- The Savings and Loan Bubble -- Chapter 4 Trapped -- The Subprime Crisis -- The Road to Recovery? -- What Comes Next? -- Part II Housing as Shelter -- Chapter 5 Zoning Lockdown -- The Illegal City of Somerville -- The Roots of American Zoning -- The Birth and Death of the Triple-Decker -- The "Lodger Evil" -- Residential Hotels / SROs -- Zoning as a Tool of Economic Exclusion -- Zoning and the FHA -- Locking Down the Core Cities -- Downzoned and Pushed Out -- Build and No-Build Zones -- The Missing Middle -- Did Zoning Cause the Housing Shortage? -- Can We Escape from Zoning Lockdown? -- Chapter 6 Not in My Backyard -- Who Are the NIMBYs? -- How the Suburban Experiment Created the NIMBY -- Incentives in the Driving City -- The Outsized Power of No -- Homevoters versus the Growth Machine (Spoiler: They Both Win) -- The New Battle over "Local Control" -- Reclaiming the Banner of Community Empowerment -- Chapter 7 Yes! In My Backyard -- The Start of a Movement -- One Neat Trick -- Does "Build Build Build" Offer an Escape from the Housing Crisis? -- Big YIMBY Question #1: (How) Does Supply Matter? -- Housing as Six Degrees of Separation -- The Importance of Vacancy Rates Try YIMBY™ Today! (*Your Local Experience May Vary) -- Big YIMBY Question #2: How Do We Get a Housing Revolution? -- Successes That Scale -- Chapter 8 Affordable with a Capital "A" -- How Los Angeles "Lost" 111,000 Affordable Housing Units -- The "Affordable" System in the US -- Public Housing -- Housing Vouchers -- Inclusionary Zoning -- The Low-Income Housing Tax Credit -- Removing Housing from the Speculative Market -- Social Housing: Public Housing 2.0? -- A Parallel Option, Not a Panacea -- Part III Housing in a Strong Town -- Chapter 9 A System That Produces a Solution -- A Paradigm Shift toward Complexity -- The Principles of a New Approach to Housing -- No Neighborhood Can Be Exempt from Change -- No Neighborhood Should Experience Radical Change -- There Must Be a Low Bar of Entry to Obtaining Housing -- Housing Must Be Part of a Neighborhood-level Economic Ecosystem -- Public Infrastructure Investments Must Focus on Where People Struggle to Use the City as It Has Been Built -- Maintaining a Sense of Urgency -- Chapter 10 Releasing the Swarm -- Building an Incremental Development Culture: The South Bend Experiment -- "Find Your Farm" -- Growing an Intentionally Inclusive Developer Community -- Cities Built by Many Hands -- The Incremental Developer's Business Model -- Incremental Development as "Gentlefication" -- It Takes a "Swarm" -- How Cities Can Support the Growth of Incremental Development -- Not "Does It Scale?" but "Does It Replicate?" -- Chapter 11 Financing a Housing Revolution -- Buffer from the Distorting Boom -- Repurposing Empty Bedrooms -- Financing Backyard Cottages -- Getting Capital off the Sidelines -- Financing Small Developers -- Transforming Entire Neighborhoods -- Aligning Local Tax Policy -- Chapter 12 Building a Strong Town -- References -- Index -- EULA. |
title | Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
title_auth | Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
title_exact_search | Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
title_full | Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
title_fullStr | Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
title_full_unstemmed | Escaping the Housing Trap The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
title_short | Escaping the Housing Trap |
title_sort | escaping the housing trap the strong towns response to the housing crisis |
title_sub | The Strong Towns Response to the Housing Crisis |
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