Housing production in California over the last 60 years. Really died after the last recession. http://www.hcd.ca.gov/housing-policy-development/statewide-housing-assessment/docs/draftsha123016final.pdf …pic.twitter.com/JJQHYcB7mi
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inland a bit in the hills i see that. but right near the coast, around say Pescadero. it’s rural + untreed, sheep grazing land and touristy rusticness. my sense is that it’s a choice, not an exigency, that the coast itself is not developed (tho sea level rise/climchg mb an issue)
(apropos nothing, places in Marin i really enjoy visiting, single-family residential in Mill Valley + Larkspur, i can’t for the life of me imagine how they can remain habitable if recent wildfire conditions persist. fairy-tale maze-like roads lined w/wooden homes in the redwoods)
There’s a crapload of flat land in the Antelope Valley and Inland Empire but greenfield single family there has been crushed by impact fees & the flip where high income jobs are not moving to suburbs anymore.
The IE is sooo much more affordable, I might move there if I could sell myself on a bad commute.
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