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The map for the city of Los Angeles shows that even in a place with many dense, urban neighborhoods, the vast majority of residential land — 74% to be exact — is reserved for single-family homes.
A map created by UC Berkeley researchers shows the L.A. neighborhoods zoned for single-family homes, highlighted in pink. Their calculation adds up to 74% while the city says it's 72%.
Zoning information, public transit lines, locations of fault lines, neighborhood boundaries, and more all get input into GeoHub, and are available to the public at the city's website.
Letters to the Editor: The neighborhoods we’ll lose if we end single-family zoning Ansel Lundberg, a renter who lives in East Sacramento, is co-chair of House Sacramento, which favors zoning ...
To address homelessness and the affordability crisis, LA needs more housing construction, and rezoning and cutting red tape would make that easier, Raman says. She adds, “We have to do everything ...
California LA’s Zoning Plan Pits Garment Workers Against Developers The Downtown LA 2040 proposal could force garment factories to close and replace affordable housing with luxury developments ...
Easing zoning restrictions on housing construction could help the city rebuild faster and find new homes for those displaced by the fires. It could also help alleviate the area's longstanding ...
La Crosse planning commission approves MSA to rewrite zoning code for $259,000. The rewrite aims to facilitate more housing options.
New rules will have to be approved by L.A. City Council members by February as the city faces a mandate to plan for more than 450,000 new homes by 2029.
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