A deep dive into the first statewide zoning atlas, identifying hidden regulatory barriers to new housing.
Zoning is increasingly viewed as a constraint on the nation’s housing supply, and as zoning enters its second century, there is a strong drumbeat for reform. Across the country, reformers have targeted the elimination of single-family zoning, pointing to research showing that single-family zoning drives up development costs, degrades the environment, and homogenizes communities.
While allowing more multi-family options could help address these issues, reformers should not exclusively focus on the elimination of single-family zoning. Process requirements like mandatory public hearings and substantive requirements involving lot configuration, building size, and occupancy, among other things, play a significant role in determining whether and what residential development occurs. Understanding the prevalence and nature of these aspects of zoning codes will help reformers identify the most impactful policy reforms. Unfortunately, most current zoning research offers only unreliable or incomplete data about the panoply of regulations that mold residential development.
The central contribution of Professor Bronin's article, "Zoning by a Thousand Cuts," is to start filling this information gap with a detailed empirical analysis of the many hidden constraints on housing embedded in zoning codes. It involves a one-of-a-kind statewide dataset (the Connecticut Zoning Atlas), tied to geospatial layers of zoning districts, developed with methods that attempt to overcome the reliability and comprehensiveness flaws of prior research. By combining regulatory and spatial analysis, this Article shows how zoning kills housing by a thousand cuts. It closes by calling for a national zoning atlas, which could better illuminate the scope and effects of zoning across a broader range of jurisdictions than this Article covers.