Thursday, February 10, 2011

Tall buildings

The Atlantic has a particularly good article on why we should make it as easy as possible to build buildings as tall as possible in urban areas. As a country it really seems like we have become anti-development. This works well when protecting sensitive ecosystems, but is absolutely silly when applied to urban development. Few buildings are so nice as to require saving from demolition.

Another interesting fact:

"The cheapest way to deliver new housing is in the form of mass-produced two-story homes, which typically cost only about $84 a square foot to erect. That low cost explains why Atlanta and Dallas and Houston are able to supply so much new housing at low prices, and why so many Americans have ended up buying affordable homes in those places... for ordinary skyscrapers, it doesn’t cost more than $500,000 to put up a nice 1,200-square-foot apartment. The land costs something, but in a 40-story building with one 1,200-square-foot unit per floor, each unit is using only 30 square feet of Manhattan—less than a thousandth of an acre. At those heights, the land costs become pretty small. If there were no restrictions on new construction, then prices would eventually come down to somewhere near construction costs, about $500,000 for a new apartment. That’s a lot more than the $210,000 that it costs to put up a 2,500-square-foot house in Houston—but a lot less than the $1 million or more that such an apartment often costs in Manhattan."

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