top | item 40031163 (no title) JaimeThompson | 1 year ago Then why are rents going up drastically all over texas, even in small towns where damn near anything can be built? discuss order hn newest NovemberWhiskey|1 year ago Never mind the small towns. Houston has no zoning laws at all, yet:https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/articles/housing/2023/07/... kilotaras|1 year ago IIRC Houston does not have zoning in direct sense of the word, but has a set of regulations and restrictions (e.g. on height, setbacks, parking minimums, lot sizes, etc.) that still drastically limits options for buildings. HDThoreaun|1 year ago Houston has covenants which basically pick up the role of zoning laws. Famously they have massive parking minimums which prevents densifying. gedy|1 year ago Some/much of this may be just inflation and the devaluing of the dollar. cscurmudgeon|1 year ago Sigh, it is always supply and demand. If demand is higher than supply, prices rise.It is a universal law of economics that people pretend doesn't apply to housing.In these towns, do you have evidence demand is stable and yet prices rise?https://scott-wiener.medium.com/yes-supply-demand-apply-to-h... JaimeThompson|1 year ago Adam Smith would disagree. load replies (1)
NovemberWhiskey|1 year ago Never mind the small towns. Houston has no zoning laws at all, yet:https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/articles/housing/2023/07/... kilotaras|1 year ago IIRC Houston does not have zoning in direct sense of the word, but has a set of regulations and restrictions (e.g. on height, setbacks, parking minimums, lot sizes, etc.) that still drastically limits options for buildings. HDThoreaun|1 year ago Houston has covenants which basically pick up the role of zoning laws. Famously they have massive parking minimums which prevents densifying.
kilotaras|1 year ago IIRC Houston does not have zoning in direct sense of the word, but has a set of regulations and restrictions (e.g. on height, setbacks, parking minimums, lot sizes, etc.) that still drastically limits options for buildings.
HDThoreaun|1 year ago Houston has covenants which basically pick up the role of zoning laws. Famously they have massive parking minimums which prevents densifying.
cscurmudgeon|1 year ago Sigh, it is always supply and demand. If demand is higher than supply, prices rise.It is a universal law of economics that people pretend doesn't apply to housing.In these towns, do you have evidence demand is stable and yet prices rise?https://scott-wiener.medium.com/yes-supply-demand-apply-to-h... JaimeThompson|1 year ago Adam Smith would disagree. load replies (1)
NovemberWhiskey|1 year ago
https://www.houstonpublicmedia.org/articles/housing/2023/07/...
kilotaras|1 year ago
HDThoreaun|1 year ago
gedy|1 year ago
cscurmudgeon|1 year ago
It is a universal law of economics that people pretend doesn't apply to housing.
In these towns, do you have evidence demand is stable and yet prices rise?
https://scott-wiener.medium.com/yes-supply-demand-apply-to-h...
JaimeThompson|1 year ago