Hotel Bristol
Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times
A new city ordinance restricts conversion of L.A.'s residential buildings, such as the Hotel Bristol , into luxury units that would displace low-income tenants. The Bristol , at 8th and Olive streets, was to be turned into a boutique hotel.

Los Angeles limits 'mansionization,' downtown hotel conversions

Gary Friedman / Los Angeles Times
A new city ordinance restricts conversion of L.A.'s residential buildings, such as the Hotel Bristol , into luxury units that would displace low-income tenants. The Bristol , at 8th and Olive streets, was to be turned into a boutique hotel.
The City Council adopts rules curbing the size of remodeled homes on the flatlands and preserving low-income housing, mostly on skid row, that advocates fear are in danger of becoming lofts.
By Jessica Garrison and Cara Mia DiMassa, Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
May 7, 2008
» Discuss Article    (71 Comments)

The Los Angeles City Council on Tuesday approved new rules to address major byproducts of the gentrification that has swept the city: limiting the size of "mansionization" additions and making it harder for developers to convert low-income housing into luxury lofts.

The rules radically limit the size of remodeled homes in the city's flatlands to about 3,000 to 4,000 square feet in most cases, curtailing what homeowners say is a plague of giant, ugly stucco boxes that are killing neighborhood character.

 
On the other end of the spectrum, council members voted to preserve more than 18,700 units in residential hotels, mostly in downtown, that advocates worry are in danger of being turned into luxury lofts or condominiums, leaving many of the city's poorest with nowhere to live.

The controversial measures required heavy negotiation among activists, property owners and businesspeople. But in both cases, the unanimous decisions by council members represent recognition of the incredible pressures that rising property values and gentrification have exerted on virtually every corner of the city in recent years.

Despite the recent slowdown in the housing market, officials said the ordinances were necessary to protect neighborhoods in the future.

"When certain neighborhoods have homes on steroids and others no longer have a place for the poor to sleep, the social fabric is torn," said City Council President Eric Garcetti.

For years, the city has been criticized for not doing more to preserve the look and character of existing neighborhoods against "tear-downs," in which property owners demolish homes and replace them with dwellings often two or three times larger. Many other Southern California cities, including Beverly Hills and Santa Monica, have far more restrictive mansionization rules.

Activists also have been alarmed at how the revitalization of downtown L.A. has led some owners of residential hotels that for decades were the domain of the poor to remake their properties for the new downtown crowd.

Mercedes Marquez, general manager of the city's Housing Department, said the double action represented a move "to make sure that everybody has a say and stake" in the city.

The mansionization law was proposed more than two years ago, after residents complained that behemoth houses were invading communities across the city, dwarfing neighborhood scale, and destroying peace and privacy.

On Tuesday, Mark Lipis of Westwood brought council members poster-size photos of his neighbor's house towering over his own. He described the offending home as a 6,500-square-foot giant with a roof deck and an elevator.

Other residents from all over Los Angeles had similar complaints.

One woman invited the council to a backyard barbecue to experience the loss of privacy she said her neighbor's giant home had caused.

The new law limits most homes to a square footage about half the size of the lot, plus 400 square feet for a garage. It would affect 304,000 lots in the flatlands of Los Angeles, most of the city's single-family homes.

Since the average size of a home in Los Angeles is now 1,700 square feet and many lots are between 5,000 and 6,000 square feet, city officials said most homes still have plenty of room to grow before hitting the new limits.

Councilman Tom LaBonge said he hoped to see a similar law for the city's 100,000-plus hillside homes soon.

Building industry and real estate representatives, on the other hand, warned that the law would drive down property values and hurt the city's economy. They also decried what they said was the law's one-size-fits-all policy.

James Ward Litz, government affairs director for the Beverly Hills/Greater Los Angeles Assn. of Realtors, conceded that there is "bad design out there." But hurting property values is not the way to fix it, he said.

Others, including representatives from the building industry, cited a report commissioned by the city that said the law could lead to an "immediate decline" in property values.

But council members were easily persuaded otherwise, approving the measure 12 to 0. Council members Jack Weiss, Bernard C. Parks and Garcetti were absent for the vote. Garcetti, who made an appearance in support of the ordinance, was on jury duty.






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Discussion

Do you agree with restraints the city council has placed on housing?
 
1. i have to wonder about the mental state of someone who is blaming Mc Mansions for the loss of affordable housing. Blame the City Council and Mayor who see the desperate need for higher density and more housing but placate the NIMBY's instead, thus leading to an even worse housing shortage. The problem could have been fixed with a velvet hammer verses the sledgehammer approach they chose.
Submitted by: Kyle Williams
8:48 PM PDT, May 9, 2008
 
2. I live on a roughly 5,600 sq. ft. lot just outside the Coastal Zone. So by the numbers I could only build a maximum 2,800 sq. ft. house on my lot? That’s not much in scheme of things today. For the past 40 years the trend has been for larger homes and believe me, while I don’t automatically support that these larger homes be built, I do support the right of someone with the wherewithal to do so within normal long established zoning setbacks. Suppose a family has a bunch of kids, needs a large room count, a large home, and can’t afford a big lot. Should they move to Manhattan Beach or Santa Clarita?
Submitted by: Janet R. Williams
8:38 PM PDT, May 9, 2008
 
3. Though I don’t support total infill housing, this is yet one more example of stupid over-reaching laws created by meddling cross-eyed myopic self –styled do-gooders and their politicians. At the pace utility rates and their acrimonious associated taxes are rising, it won’t be long before only the extremely wealthy can afford to heat or cool a so-called Mc Mansion’s. Why not let the marketplace work like it is in removing full size SUV’s from the roads now.
Submitted by: Chris Williams
8:34 PM PDT, May 9, 2008
 



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