Arbitrary lines How zoning broke the American city and how to fix it

M. Nolan Gray

Book - 2022

"What if scrapping one flawed policy could bring US cities closer to addressing debilitating housing shortages, stunted growth and innovation, persistent racial and economic segregation, and car-dependent development? It's time for America to move beyond zoning, argues city planner M. Nolan Gray in Arbitrary Lines: How Zoning Broke the American City and How to Fix It. With lively explanations and stories, Gray shows why zoning abolition is a necessary-if not sufficient-condition for building more affordable, vibrant, equitable, and sustainable cities. The arbitrary lines of zoning maps across the country have come to dictate where Americans may live and work, forcing cities into a pattern of growth that is segregated and sprawling.... The good news is that it doesn't have to be this way. Reform is in the air, with cities and states across the country critically reevaluating zoning. In cities as diverse as Minneapolis, Durham, and Hartford, the key pillars of zoning are under fire, with apartment bans being scrapped, minimum lot sizes dropping, and off-street parking requirements disappearing altogether. Some American cities-including Houston, America's fourth-largest city-already make land-use planning work without zoning. In Arbitrary Lines, Gray lays the groundwork for this ambitious cause by clearing up common confusions and myths about how American cities regulate growth and examining the major contemporary critiques of zoning. Gray sets out some of the efforts currently underway to reform zoning and charts how land-use regulation might work in the post-zoning American city. Despite mounting interest, no single book has pulled these threads together for a popular audience. In Arbitrary Lines, Gray fills this gap by showing how zoning has failed to address even our most basic concerns about urban growth over the past century, and how we can think about a new way of planning a more affordable, prosperous, equitable, and sustainable American city"--

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Subjects
Published
Washington ; Covelo [Calif.] : Island Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
M. Nolan Gray (author)
Physical Description
xi, 241 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-232) and index.
ISBN
9781642832549
  • Introduction
  • Part I.
  • Chapter 1. Where Zoning Comes From
  • Land Use before Zoning
  • What Changed?
  • 1916
  • The Federal Push
  • Chapter 2. How Zoning Works
  • How Zoning Is Born
  • Decoding the City
  • Everything in Its Right Place
  • Don't Be Dense
  • How Zoning Changes
  • Patching Up Zoning?
  • Part II.
  • Chapter 3. Planning an Affordability Crisis
  • Zoned Out
  • Mandating Mansions
  • Housing Delayed Is Housing Denied
  • Why Did This Happen?
  • Chapter 4. The Wealth We Lost
  • How Cities Make Us Rich
  • Zoning for Stagnation
  • How Much Poorer Are We?
  • Chapter 5. Apartheid by Another Name
  • Zoning for Segregation
  • All Are Welcome, If You Can Afford It
  • The Bitter Fruits of Segregation
  • Chapter 6. Sprawl by Design
  • Zoning for Sprawl
  • Assume a Car
  • Fleeing Sustain ability
  • Part III.
  • Chapter 7. Toward a Less Bad Zoning
  • The Low-Hanging Fruit of Local Reform
  • Taming Local Control
  • Is There a Role for the Federal Government?
  • Turning Japanese
  • Chapter 8. The Case for Abolishing Zoning
  • Why Reform Isn't Enough
  • Steelmanning Zoning
  • Meanwhile, Back in the Real World
  • Chapter 9. The Great Unzoned City
  • The Compromise That Saved Houston
  • How Cities Organize Themselves
  • Land-Use Regulation after Zoning
  • How to Abolish Zoning in Two Easy Steps
  • Chapter 10. Planning after Zoning
  • It's the Externalities, Stupid!
  • Desegregating the Post-Zoning City
  • Reviving the Plan
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix: What Zoning Isn't
  • Zoning Isn't the Market
  • Zoning Isn't the Only Kind of Land-Use Regulation
  • Zoning Isn't Environmental Regulation
  • Zoning Isn't City Planning
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Recommended Reading
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Choice Review

The American experiment postulates that this country can do better. This enduring belief can be applied to a wide range of public policies, including zoning at the local level of government. Gray, a city planner currently pursuing his PhD in urban studies at the University of California, Los Angeles, offers a critical yet hopeful assessment of zoning's negative socioeconomic and environmental impacts and its ability to successfully address them by reforming land-use regulations in the post-zoning American city. Fundamentally flawed and devoid of any comprehensive principles that guide planning, the detrimental zoning regulations that have emerged need to be reassessed, revamped, and subsequently reformed to facilitate a more prosperous, equitable, and sustainable US. Within the context of these ambitious goals, the book offers an analytically strong and resource-rich examination of zoning. Drawing on maps and other relevant images to illustrate zoning concepts and impacts, the book begins with an explanatory overview of land-use regulations and continues with a focus on the contemporary critiques of zoning. Building on this conceptual foundation and assessment, the final part describes zoning reform efforts currently underway, argues for zoning abolition, and offers a practically oriented sketch of sound planning. Summing Up: Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; professionals. --Anton Erwin Wohlers, Harford Community College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A study of zoning as an instrument of inequality--and deliberately so. Former New York City planning official Gray examines the "arbitrary lines" that mark zoning maps. In most of the country's major cities, he notes, the least desired sort of construction is apartment buildings, since these typically serve poorer communities, often made up of immigrants or ethnic minorities. Because deed covenants are no longer politically acceptable, zoning authorities hide behind "a dizzying array of confusing and pseudoscientific rules" that touch on such things as setbacks, floor area ratios, room size, and the like. So it has always been: Gray observes that the first discernible zoning laws were meant to impede Eastern European Jews from settling along New York's Fifth Avenue. Modern zoning laws block not just the movements of people of color and of low income; they also stunt growth and innovation. Exclusionary rules make cities, which should be engines of innovation, unaffordable while immiserating the people who live there. Add to that the extraordinary requirements of many zoning laws about housing density and the location of shopping centers, and modern zoning condemns suburbanites to life in their cars. Examining the case of the zoning-free city of Houston, Gray convincingly presses the argument for rethinking and largely abandoning zoning laws as such, writing that these laws usually have only to do with "uses and densities on private land--nothing more, nothing less," and are largely proscriptive and not prescriptive. Instead, the author urges that precedence be given to planning, which is a different thing entirely, and a planning system that allows for the interlayering of different kinds of housing and other properties that will help make housing more affordable and available and more ecologically sustainable--"green downtown apartments," say, as opposed to "brown detached homes out on the edge of town." A welcome manifesto for rethought urban spaces and their outliers, bringing social justice into the discussion. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.