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Council brief: City seeks to revamp its residential zoning standards

Original post made on Nov 18, 2019

Mountain View is looking to revamp its residential zoning standards on more than 900 acres of city land, aimed at encouraging a diverse range of ownership and rental housing rather than single-family homes or massive complexes.

Read the full story here Web Link posted Sunday, November 17, 2019, 8:18 AM

Comments (5)

Posted by Darin
a resident of Another Mountain View Neighborhood
on Nov 18, 2019 at 2:40 pm

Darin is a registered user.

Zoning is just part of the equation. Increased regulation favors the massive apartment complexes, who can spread the cost of compliance across many, many rental units. Smaller landlords (i.e., those who might invest in duplexes, triplexes, etc.) have to spread their compliance expenses across just a few rental units.


Posted by D Moore
a resident of The Crossings
on Nov 18, 2019 at 4:26 pm

Great, more 5 story+ high rises. Walking on California St. or adjacent San Antonio will soon feel like walking down 5th avenue in Manhattan. Little sky and certainly no view of any mountains. Also, please differentiate between rental housing vs. massive apartment complexes. They amount to the same thing. And damnit, don't tell me that nobody would ever again want a single family home. Obviously those that do, leave our state and are seemingly doing so in droves. Good luck filling these awesome structures that cater to age 20-30 high-tech job transients and couldn't care less about families.


Posted by MV_Voter
a resident of Rex Manor
on Nov 18, 2019 at 4:50 pm

MV_Voter is a registered user.

what i wonder about mostly is the infrastructure...water mainly, going in AND out...electricity and parking, so traffic woes will increase, too! in their attempt to provide housing for so many of our "age 20-30 high-tech job transients", the council seems to be neglecting infrastructure, which is what supports good, clean living conditions. and what of the schools that will be overcrowded?
and of course, as D. Moore pointed out, what is to become of single family homes, with your own back yard, and the other things we all like about the single family home?


Posted by Randy Guelph
a resident of Cuernavaca
on Nov 18, 2019 at 6:32 pm

I think you all are quite confused. Nothing here would make single-family homes illegal, all it does is legalize other forms of currently illegal housing.


Posted by Calley Smith
a resident of Willowgate
on Nov 21, 2019 at 2:46 pm

"Walking on California St. or adjacent San Antonio will soon feel like walking down 5th avenue in Manhattan."

To be fair, like it or not, this is where the Bay Area needs to be headed if it is going to house everyone who wants to live and work here.

Without this, we will soon not be able to have restaurants, janitorial services, daycare, schools, roads without potholes, new construction, plumbing services, etc., because no one will be able to live locally and staff these jobs, and driving 2+ hours each way for these jobs is mostly untenable.

There are lots of other areas in California and the US you can move to if you are seeking a more bucolic lifestyle.


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