D.C. planner: Affordability is cities’ next big challenge

“Rock star planner” may be an oxymoron, but if there are rock star planners, Harriet Tregoning is one. Tregoning has been chief city planner in Washington, D.C., since 2007— a time of rapid growth and change in the District of Columbia. She’s stepping down to run the Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

A looming problem in many U.S. cities is affordability, she said in an interview with Next City, but looking only at real estate prices masks the problem.  “I think the challenge for American cities for the next decade or more is indeed affordability, but it’s not just about housing,” she said. (Read the whole interview here.)

She noted that for the 8 million jobs lost in the recession, the average wage was $24 an hour. While that number of jobs has been created in recent years, their average wage was $11 an hour.

“Middle-wage jobs are declining,” she said. “Or if they’re growing, they’re growing at a much slower rate than the other categories (high-wage, and low-wage hospitality and retail jobs). So affordability needs to be broadened to talk about job creation, middle-income job creation. What are we going to do with our infrastructure to enable us to produce more employment?”

Two topics in the interview have specific resonance for Charlotte. Tregoning talked about the retrofitting of some
suburban areas. “We have more urbanizing suburban development here in the Washington area than in any place in the country,” she said. “When Tysons Corner decided to do this, when Fairfax County decided to do this, it tipped the balance for a lot of other places.”

And she talked about the challenge for the city (which has a height limit) in accommodating new growth. Should the city, which has many areas of one- and two-story buildings, scrap or at least raise the height limit in order to allow towers in some areas in order to keep the growth from spreading into less-dense neighborhoods. Tregoning said:

“Our relatively torrid rate of [population] growth — more than 2 percent a year, 1,100 people a month — is causing the dialog to change. … Plenty of other places around the world accommodate much larger populations in the same kind of geography without having tall buildings. I think the dialog in our city will be, how do we want to accommodate such growth? What kind of neighborhood change are we willing to tolerate? And how will that dictate where in the city growth will go?

“ … The starting point will be asking every neighborhood, ‘Here’s the growth coming to the city, here’s what we project over the next 30 years. This is what your share of that growth looks like. How would you most like to accommodate that growth in your neighborhood?’ I think the easy answer is, ‘I know, let’s grow in that neighborhood over there! They need some growth, but our neighborhood, we’re good.’ The question is going to be, how to have a dialog where people really have to consider real choices about how that growth will be accommodated?”

Charlotte has yet to seriously confront that same issue: Where do you allow intense growth and how do you balance it alongside a wish to keep older, less-dense areas from being wiped clean of the past? The conundrum is most likely to arise as transit-oriented zoning comes to historic, low-density neighborhoods like NoDa and Optimist Park along the route of the Blue Line Extension. The city’s TOD zoning allows heights of as much as 10 or 12 stories. Even a beloved area like NoDa, which has no historic district protection, may well see most of its historic fabric scraped away in favor of 10-story buildings. Think that can’t happen? Just look at uptown Charlotte, which lost virtually all its old buildings and is now mostly new office and condo towers scattered among parking decks and surface parking lots that replaced its historic fabric.

Weirdest city list ever?

Mural in downtown Kings Mountain. Photo: Nancy Pierce

We all love to look at those lists of “Best Places To … ” I plead guilty as charged. But this list is one of the weirdest I’ve encountered. It’s the Movoto.com blog’s Best Places to Retire in North Carolina.

No. 1 is — wait for it — Morrisville. Really. It’s only 5 miles from an international airport, so that pushed it to the top. As if that is what everyone is looking for in retirement.

The rest of the Top 10, in order: Mount Holly, Apex, Holly Springs, Kings Mountain, Mint Hill, Stallings, Harrisburg, Sanford and Matthews.

Charlotte ranks No. 30, below — among others — Spring Lake (a suburb of Fort Bragg), Indian Trail, Gastonia and Goldsboro.

The criteria the website used? Cost of living, total crime, total amenities, weather, distance from nearest international airport.

As one colleague of mine, who happens to be retired, quipped: “That is the weirdest list that I have ever come across.  I wouldn’t want to retire in any of them. I notice that the picture used for Harrisburg is the Speedway, which, of course, isn’t in Harrisburg.”


And what is “good” weather? Lack of snow and ice? The hot, humid coastal town of Leland ranks No. 1. But whoever would rate “hot and humid” as desirable? Those are things you endure to be in a great place, like Charleston or Savannah, not attributes you seek out. What if you like colder climates?

And how can you rate “amenities” as if everyone wants the same things? The Olive Garden and Red Lobster may be what some retirees want, but what about those who’d rather find lots of ethnic restaurants, a symphony, art museums and good cultural offerings, in which case Kings Mountain (No. 5) is NOT a place they’d enjoy retiring to.
Maybe you don’t want to have to drive everywhere for everything and want a place with sidewalks, stores and offices within an easy walk of housing, plus good transit service — important for retirees as their ability to drive diminishes. In which case Mint Hill and Stallings (No. 6 and 7) are terrible choices.
Asheville, a magnet for retirees and young creatives alike, is down at No. 59. Hendersonville, in the mountains, is almost at the bottom of the list. Have you been to Hendersonville? Practically the whole town is a retirement center.

I’ve been to Spring Lake (No. 14). It’s been some years but when I was there last it as a town of massage parlors, pawn shops, mobile homes and grime. (Maybe it’s improved?) I’ve been to Asheville. Trust me, it is not even close.

Now I have to say some towns on the list are, indeed, true towns and lovely spots. No. 2 Mount Holly, on the banks of the Catawba near Charlotte, is charming. Kings Mountain is, as well, and so are plenty of the other places listed near the top of the list.

But others are placeless collections of suburban subdivisions strung together by strip shopping centers plunked along highways. If you’re looking to retire to a real place, or even — shock! — a city, this list is misguided.