Can housing crisis be alleviated by upzoning overhaul?

BERKELEY — Roughly three years ago, Councilmember Rigel Robinson and his team conceptualized a vision to legalize 1,000 new residential housing units in the city’s Southside.

“But I didn’t think that that met the severity of the housing crisis or the urgency of the moment,” Rigel said, reflecting on how he wagered that his policy staff could successfully develop even more ambitious zoning changes for his district, which encompasses UC Berkeley’s campus. “And they said, ‘Bet.’”

On Tuesday, the Berkeley City Council approved the subsequent planning overhaul, which may allow an additional 2,650 residential units to be built near Telegraph Avenue — known for decades as the bustling, spiritual hub of Berkeley.

This upzoning plan allows developers to construct up to 12 or more stories in one of the Southside’s busiest, densest neighborhoods — bounded by Bancroft Way, Prospect Street, Dwight Way and Fulton Street.

Building heights along some portions of those streets were capped at 45 and 55 feet, but others were bumped to 85 feet — roughly the distance between bases on a major league baseball diamond.

Projects could even reach 16 stories, depending on how much they take advantage of new state density laws.

The city’s planning codes were also revamped to remove some restrictions on using a building’s ground floor as retail and residential space, as well as reduced requirements for minimum setbacks from the sidewalk and added new minimum density standards.

“I think there’s some parcels where the permissible height will actually outright double, and then you factor in two layers of density bonuses, and it’s an entirely different landscape,” Robinson said. “We have come such a long way from where the conversation has started.”

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