An abandoned office park in Sacramento will be the site of the first group of 1,200 tiny homes to be built in four cities to address California’s homelessness crisis, the governor’s office announced Wednesday after being criticized for the project experiencing multiple delays.

Gov. Gavin Newsom is under pressure to make good on his promise to show he’s tackling the issue. In March, the Democratic governor announced a plan to gift several California cities hundreds of tiny homes by the fall to create space to help clear homeless encampments that have sprung up across the state’s major cities. The $30 million project would create homes, some as small as 120 square feet (11 square meters), that can be assembled in 90 minutes and cost a fraction of what it takes to build permanent housing.

More than 171,000 homeless people live in California, making up about 30% of the nation’s homeless population. The state has spent roughly $30 billion in the last few years to help them, with mixed results.

    • JJROKCZ
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      141 year ago

      The tiny homes can be put up and taken down quicker from the sounds of the article. Takes the better part of a year to build an apartment building, they can put each of these up in 90 minutes supposedly. Does make me worried for structural integrity but it’s not like California gets severe weather so should be fine.

      • @conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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        151 year ago

        Modern Hoovervilles. There is nothing new under the sun, etc. etc. But yes, this is the point, scale up housing quick, get homeless people housed now and try and get them stabilized and back into society.

        • JJROKCZ
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          71 year ago

          Yea the hope is providing them any stability will help them back on their feet and on the path to living independently again

      • @unceme@lemmy.one
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        71 year ago

        I don’t think it was an engineering consideration, I suspect it was the only thing they could get past the NIMBYs

    • High density housing specifically dedicated to housing homeless people also seems like a really bad idea.

      We have many, many decades of experience of segregating socially disadvantaged people into high density “projects,” and it never led to any desirable results.

      Much better to set aside a certain quota of new high density housing for socially disadvantaged people, one apartment at a time, and give people the opportunity to integrate with a community without the stigma of giving them an address in the undesirable stigmatized “projects.”

    • partial_accumen
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      21 year ago

      I don’t have a horse in this race except to imagine being in the situation myself, but why should only people with lots of money be allowed to own their own walls and small piece of land?

    • HobbitFoot
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      21 year ago

      $30,000,000 / 1,200 homes = $25,000 per home.

      That seems cheap, and tiny homes will probably still have the density to support mass transit.

  • @grue@lemmy.world
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    161 year ago

    Please, I’m begging you: just fix the damn zoning already!

    (That goes for California and everywhere else in North America.)

    • @Num10ck@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      in tons of instances theres simply lacking the infrastructure like electricity water and sewer and traffic etc to handle such densities in a reasonable timeframe, nor the labor or materials or finances to bring them up. i’d love to see a long term plan along with a short term stopgap like this.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        It’s called “impact fees.” The developers pay for the infrastructure costs to support the development.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I don’t think it’s that; development with dense zoning can be just as profitable, if not more so.

        If anything, the corrupt business interests behind this would’ve been mostly General Motors and Standard Oil back in the day. Nowadays, I think it’s genuinely sustained mostly by good ol’ fashioned grassroots racism, classism, and NIMBYism.

        • @PsychedSy@sh.itjust.works
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          11 year ago

          Depends on who wants what land or who owns what land. If you think local politicians aren’t up the asses of your local elite, I’d say you’re being way too kind.

          • @grue@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Perhaps I misled by using the word “grassroots.” The local elite are the NIMBYs. Their selfish interests as homeowners collectively greatly outweigh the business interests of the tiny minority of them who are property developers.

            In other words, consider the archetypal mansion neighborhood way too close to the city center (for example: Tuxedo Park in Atlanta), whose single-family, large lot zoning physically displaces tens of thousands of people who could have been living there if development were allowed to meet demand. Even if the filthy-rich developers living there wanted to buy out their neighbors and profit fabulously from meeting that demand – and they don’t, because they themselves live there – they can’t because their neighbors are doctors and lawyers and CEOs and celebrities who are just as rich and powerful as they are and would never stand for it.

            • @PsychedSy@sh.itjust.works
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              11 year ago

              That’s fair. I’m in a small/mid sized city that’s still expanding into the neighboring towns so the impact is really bad at times.

        • @TheFonz@lemmy.world
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          21 year ago

          It depends on each region but in the case of Cali prop 13 (someone correct me) keeps a certain type of zoning locked in preventing new developments. It’s awful.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    11 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — An abandoned office park in Sacramento will be the site of the first group of 1,200 tiny homes to be built in four cities to address California’s homelessness crisis, the governor’s office announced Wednesday after being criticized for the project experiencing multiple delays.

    But seven months after the announcement, those homes haven’t been built, and the state has yet to award any contracts for builders, the Sacramento Bee reported.

    Newsom’s administration said the state is “moving with unprecedented rate” on the project and will finalize the contracts this month, with plans to break ground at the Sacramento location before the end of the year.

    Officials also pointed to a new law signed by Newsom in July to streamline construction of tiny homes.

    “When it comes to projects like this, it’s just not overnight,” Hafsa Kaka, a senior advisor to Newsom, said at a news conference Wednesday.

    San Jose this month has secured a 7.2-acre lot owned by the Santa Clara Valley Transportation Authority for its 200 homes.


    The original article contains 448 words, the summary contains 171 words. Saved 62%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!