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In a bid to preserve affordable housing, Arlington Co. allows for more changes to older homes

An example of the sort of home impacted by zoning changes that would make it easier for owners of older townhouses and duplexes to renovate or expand their homes. (Courtesy Arlington County)
Two-family homes impacted by the new zoning changes are located around Arlington. (Courtesy Arlington County)
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An example of the sort of home impacted by zoning changes that would make it easier for owners of older townhouses and duplexes to renovate or expand their homes. (Courtesy Arlington County)

The Arlington County Board has signed off on some zoning changes to for the owners of older townhouses and duplexes to renovate or expand their homes.

The Board voted unanimously yesterday (Tuesday) to amend the county zoning ordinance to allow for more changes to 鈥渘onconforming homes鈥 鈥 structures built before the county鈥檚 zoning rules took effect back in 1942 that might not match current standards.聽The move will simultaneously remove some headaches for certain homeowners and help聽 for the county鈥檚 middle class.

The county鈥檚 old rules have the owners of certain types of homes, who were previously barred from commissioning even simple renovations without enduring a lengthy county appeals process. That incentivized tear-downs over renovations, which in turn reduced the county鈥檚 stock of market rate affordable housing.

鈥淭his is the kind of stock we hope will age over time and become more affordable,鈥 Board Chair Katie Cristol said Tuesday. 鈥淚 feel so strongly that this is a move for the better, not only for these individual homeowners, but for the preservation of this stock, that will allow the current and next generation of Arlington鈥檚 middle class to move in and own a piece of this community, or rent a piece of this community.鈥

County planner Kellie Brown told the Board that the changes could allow for interior 鈥渂y right鈥 renovations at more than 600 homes, which won鈥檛 require extensive county review, and exterior additions or expansions at roughly 1,500 partially detached homes or townhouses. While the changes will impact all nonconforming homes in areas zoned聽鈥淩2-7,鈥 county staffers 聽that the bulk of the impacted houses are located along Lee Highway, Columbia Pike, Wilson Boulevard, and in Nauck.

John Quirk, who owns a duplex with his wife in the North Highlands neighborhood near Rosslyn, counts himself among the homeowners who plan to take advantage of the change. He launched a urging the Board to make just these sort of zoning changes last December, after the county鈥檚 Board of Zoning Appeals denied his family鈥檚 attempts to convert an unused attic into a third-story bedroom.

鈥淎t first we didn鈥檛 even know you were prevented from doing that, so we were really frustrated,鈥 Quirk told ARLnow. 鈥淏ut this is just an example of the government working for people. The Board was very receptive to all this.鈥

Quirk says he worked with his neighbors and other homeowners to make the Board aware of these challenges, and he credits the county鈥檚 鈥渕easured approach鈥 in studying the issue in more detail before moving ahead with the changes.

He also lauded the Board for living up to its stated goal of in the county, noting that he and his wife were considering moving elsewhere in Northern Virginia, as they 鈥渃an鈥檛 afford a $1.1 million house in Lyon Village.鈥 Quirk fully expects that plenty of others have faced the same problems maintaining a reasonable 鈥渨ork-life balance鈥 of commuting into D.C. while coping with Arlington鈥檚 rising housing costs, and he looks forward to starting work on his own duplex sometime early next year.

鈥淏y living in these smaller homes, we鈥檙e a demographic that creates population density,鈥 Quirk said. 鈥淎nd that makes Arlington the great, walkable community that it is.鈥

Quirk noted that he encountered virtually no opposition during his push for the zoning changes, and Board member Erik Gutshall similarly lauded the effort鈥檚 鈥渂road community support鈥 Tuesday.

The lone complaints about the issue came courtesy of local activist and frequent county government critic Jim Hurysz, who charged that allowing more renovations will actually drive up the prices of the homes in question and hurt the very middle-class residents the county hopes to help.

鈥淢r. Gutshall ought to be very happy at least, as he owns a ,鈥 Hurysz said.

While the affordable housing advocates with the Alliance for Housing Solutions agree that there is 鈥渟ome possibility that streamlining additions to two-family homes may increase their values, and thus reduce affordability,鈥 they too supported the changes as a key way to preserve older homes.

鈥淲e believe that the typical arrangement and size of the homes and housing type itself will help maintain its relative affordability over time, particularly when compared to the typical single-family home in Arlington,鈥 Executive Director Michelle Winters wrote in an Oct. 18 letter to the Board. 鈥淔urthermore, these kinds of changes can help provide more opportunities for middle-income households to stay in Arlington to raise families rather than leaving in search of other housing options.鈥

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