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Residential Penthouses Move Forward at Zoning Commission

  • June 9th 2015

by Tianna Mañón

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Residential Penthouses Move Forward at Zoning Commission: Figure 1

A bill signed into law by President Obama more than a year ago may soon be making an impact on the DC skyline.

On Monday night, the Zoning Commission moved forward with plans to make it legal for DC rooftops to include habitable space in penthouses. The ZC has been trying to figure out how the new rule will work since August 2014. Currently, the Height Act determines the maximum height of a building depending on where it’s located in the city. Mechanical penthouses have been allowed up to about 20 feet above that maximum height. The new law expanded the definition of penthouse to include both mechanical and habitable space, and the ZC and OP have had to determine how that would work on commercial and residential buildings throughout the city.

The Commission took proposed action and will likely take a final vote on the regulations in September.

They’ve had to wrestle with adapting existing Height Act rules to comply with the revised law, looking at everything from the potential impact on solar panels to the relationship between mechanical and residential penthouses on a rooftop. Once the new rules are in place, residential penthouses will soon begin cropping up on DC rooftops — likely a welcome change from the industrial-looking, often metal-clad mechanical penthouses that currently dot the District’s skyline in its most-trafficked areas.

On Monday, the Commission weighed proposed text and alternatives from the Office of Planning, which is tasked with fitting the new law into the zoning code. Planning’s most recent proposal outlined various ways to manage the new penthouses, from looking at the specifics of how high developers can go to determining how penthouse space will factor into existing inclusionary zoning requirements.

OP divided up the regulations by height, offering more restrictions on smaller buildings in residential zones and fewer on larger ones in higher-density zones. The office proposed a base height of 18 feet, six inches for a penthouse on taller buildings, with 10 of those feet habitable. The ZC recommended the habitable space be upped to 15 feet to allow elevators room to maneuver in the penthouses in compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. The ZC also recommended requiring inclusionary zoning for all residential penthouses at 50 percent of the area median income (AMI), meaning developers will have to either include affordable units at 50 percent AMI in their projects or make an equivalent contribution to a city housing fund.

Certain parts of the city, particularly those fronting Pennsylvania Avenue NW near the National Mall as well as buildings near the White House, may be excluded from the new law.

Commissioner Peter May cautioned against more lenient regulations for penthouses, which he said could lead to “back door attempts” to circumvent rules that limit the number of stories a building can have or test the intended uses of penthouses. He also said habitable spaces should be limited to 30 square feet on detached dwellings, rowhouses and flats to avoid abuse of the new rules. Earlier Monday night, the ZC had voted to limit the height in residential rowhouse neighborhoods to 35 feet.

“We’re not trying to allow this as a way to get additional space,” he said.

The ZC spent almost two hours poring over the recommendations before May moved to approve most of them as a proposed action with the commissioners’ comments included. The language will be refined by the Office of the Attorney General and a comment period for the public will follow immediately, ending on Sept. 11. The ZC will then make its final decisions on the penthouse provisions.

See other articles related to: height act, penthouse, penthouses, zoning commission

This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/residential_penthouses_move_forward_at_zoning_commission/9832.

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