Los Angeles Times

After decades of suburban sprawl, San Diego eyes big shift to dense development

San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer thinks his city has said "no" to housing for too long.

Where it once grew by sprawling - with political leaders in the middle of the last century annexing hundreds of square miles from the San Pasqual Valley near Cleveland National Forest to the border with Mexico - today San Diego is planning for an urban development boom so people don't have to drive to work.

But that growth hasn't happened yet, and the city's housing costs are escalating.

So in his State of the City address in January, Faulconer proposed some of the most aggressive strategies of any California city to promote apartment and condominium construction. For San Diego residents to live affordably, the mayor said, the city must stop obliging long-held community demands to keep buildings short and stop requiring new parking spots so people have more places to live.

"We must change from a city that shouts 'Not

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times6 min readAmerican Government
How Kevin McCarthy Is Influencing This Congressional Race — Without Being On The Ballot
VISALIA, Calif. — As he stood on a sun-dappled patio overlooking the Visalia Country Club, Tulare County Sheriff Mike Boudreaux didn't mince words about his chances in his run for Congress. "I am the underdog," Boudreaux told a crowd of supporters. "
Los Angeles Times5 min read
Mary McNamara: Being A ‘Doctor Who’ Fan Means Learning How To Love And Lose And Love Again
I’m four episodes into the reign of Ncuti Gatwa’s Fifteenth Doctor ... well, five if you count the “Doctor Who Special 4” in which he met his companion Ruby Sunday (Millie Gibson) ... well, five and a half if you also count the “Doctor Who Special 3”
Los Angeles Times6 min read
In Rural Calif., Serenity Threatened By Planned Battery Facilities, Costlier Fire Insurance
ACTON, Calif. -- On five acres in Acton, Christina Weyer and her husband care for rescued senior and special-needs equines. At the moment, six horses and 13 donkeys, along with a dog and a clutter of feral cats, share the property. In this dry, winds

Related Books & Audiobooks