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The Graph That Illustrates DC's Housing Production Versus Population Growth

  • February 10th 2020

by Nena Perry-Brown

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As DC continues its efforts to drum up support for Mayor Bowser's housing production goals, the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development has released a graph* showing how — or whether — approval of housing units has kept pace with population growth in the city.

Below is the graph, along with a few observations.

Units approved via building permits from 1960-2019 compared with population. Click to enlarge.
  • When DC's population was at its height, approaching 800,000 residents in 1964-65, at least 8,000 housing units were approved annually. This wasn't sustained, however, dropping to 4,500 units in 1966 and not reaching a comparable level, or even exceeding 3,000 units, until 2011.
  • The population in the city bottomed out in 1999-2000, but by this time, approved units had already begun trending upward again. That continued until 2008, when approvals plummeted from just under 2,000 units a year to roughly 500 amid the Great Recession. 
  • Approved housing units shot up from roughly 800 in 2010 to over 4,500 in 2011 as population growth resumed. Permitted units have fluctuated since. The most recent peak was in 2017, when just over 6,000 units were permitted.
  • With just over 4,500 units approved, 2018 was a blip year in the data, perhaps reflecting the impact of the wave of planned-unit development appeals.

Now, for a little inferring from UrbanTurf.

If one guesstimates based on the graph that an average of 5,500 units were permitted between 2017 and 2019, one could expect a total of 33,000 units to be permitted between the beginning of 2020 and the end of 2025, short of the mayor's goal of producing 36,000 units by 2025. However, if the goal were to get 36,000 units approved by the end of 2025, the city is on pace to be just 3,000 units short, which could be compensated for if outstanding appeals are resolved and the current Comprehensive Plan amendment cycle succeeds in creating more growth-friendly conditions.

*The graph was released as part of the city's Continuing Conversations on Housing series to examine the intersection between the enduring impact of racist and exclusionary housing policy with current land use policy and housing supply constraints. A third event was held this past Saturday at the Howard Theatre.

Thumbnail image courtesy of Ted Eytan

This article originally published at http://dc.urbanturf.production.logicbrush.com/articles/blog/the-one-chart-that-ilustrates-dcs-housing-production/16439.

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