Los Angeles Times

Santa Cruz plans high-rise living as a fix for sky-high housing costs — and meets opposition

The San Lorenzo River courses past Kaiser Permanente Arena, right, home of the the Santa Cruz Warriors of the NBA G league, in an area where the city plans new high-rise development on Tuesday, Nov. 21, 2023, in Santa Cruz, California.

You can sense it in the ubiquitous "Help Wanted" posters in artsy shops and restaurants, in the ranks of university students living out of their cars and in the outsize percentage of locals camping on the streets.

This seaside county known for its windswept beauty and easy living is in the midst of one of the most serious housing crises anywhere in home-starved California. Santa Cruz County, home to a beloved surf break and a bohemian University of California campus, also claims the state's highest rate of homelessness and, by one measure based on local incomes, its least affordable housing.

Leaders in the city of Santa Cruz have responded to this hardship in a land of plenty — and to new state laws demanding construction of more affordable housing — with a plan to build up rather than out.

A downtown long centered on quaint sycamore-lined Pacific Avenue has boomed with new construction in recent years. Shining glass and metal apartment complexes sprout in multiple locations, across a streetscape once dominated by 20th century classics like the Art Deco-inspired Palomar Inn apartments.

And the City Council and planning department envision building even bigger and higher, with high-rise apartments of up to 12 stories in the southern section of downtown that comes closest to the city's boardwalk and the landmark wooden roller coaster known as the Giant Dipper.

"It's on everybody's lips now, this talk about our housing challenge," said Don Lane, a former mayor and an activist for homeless people.

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