
Originally Posted by
summit
Further illustrating the above point, in my area there is well over 200 acres of undeveloped land in various lots, a good chunk of it owned by Vail Resorts, much of it around current employee and workforce housing areas.
We aren't at buildout.
So why do you need density in the few SFH areas, less than 5% of the housing units in my zone, when those are not going to actually make a meaningful impact on the housing situation?
If you want densification, there are tons of condo buildings on large lots where the buildings occupy less area on the lot proportionally than do most SFHs. You could build 1 or 2 more MDUs that would supply more housing than if every SFH built an ADU, and those two complexes would be at a fraction of the cost per unit of the ADUs.
The biggest issue for creating new workforce reserved housing is build cost vs what the workforce can pay. ADUs have the highest cost per unit of any workforce housing option, which is why they have to be STRs to cashflow.
Eagle Water said the issue will be a lack of capacity necessitating hundreds of millions of dollars in plant upgrades. Local government will have NO say of "this area has water capacity so you can do ADUs in this hood, but that hood doesn't have capacity." Not allowed under the legislation.
The legislation forbids "requiring entities to submit a completed and validated water loss audit report to the Colorado water conservation board."
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