Why Historic Preservation Districts Should Be a Thing of the Past (xpost from GD)
http://www.citylab.com/housing/2016/01/why-historic-preservation-districts-should-be-a-thing-of-the-past/431598/
Behre reports that Charleston is changing its architectural-review process, which could ease the way for more ambitious growth. Charleston residents arent all against the idea. And as his longtime readers know, the people of Charleston bear an authentic interest in architecture; its not a front. Still, the same class of argument being levied against cutting-edge campus design is being used to thwart more affordable housing, and thats a problem. The result is a Charleston elite of increasingly wealthy downtown residents, and an affordable housing crisis for everybody else....
Historic districts thwart this access in the name of preserving the character of a neighborhood. Its not that far off from any argument about preserving the character of a single-family neighborhood. And the resultspockets of highly segregated wealth and accessare the same around the nation, whether the homes are architecturally distinct or dreadful McMansions.
That case against historic districting is similar to the case against protectionist single-family zoning anywhere. And the question isnt just aesthetic, its constitutional. The U.S. Supreme Courts decision last year on disparate impact means that wealthy communities cannot keep affordable housing out because wealthy residents feel that theyre better off without it. The federal governments Affordable Furthering Fair Housing rule means that cities and neighborhoods cannot use single-family zoning to keep affordable housing at bay.
As cities confront the growing nationwide housing crisis, there will be both a need and a market for building more densely, even in the most precious neighborhoods. Historic preservation is a tool better used to protect community assets, not private assets. Historic preservation is a tool better used to safeguard the historical resources in which everyone can take pridenot the historical resources that were only ever allotted to winners by race-based housing policies.