Lexington, one of the most expensive housing markets in Massachusetts, this
week became the first town in the state to pass zoning that aims to comply
with a new law that calls for denser development in communities served by
the MBTA — a sign that even some in wealthy communities are buying into
Beacon Hill’s plan to address sky-high housing costs.

Lexington’s Town Meeting voted, 107-63, on Wednesday night to approve a
series of new zones
<https://www.lexingtonma.gov/DocumentCenter/View/8701/Article-34-Motion-revised-32723?bidId=>
 that would allow multifamily housing to be built by right — or without
onerous special permitting. The vote came more than a year and a half
before Lexington’s deadline to submit new zoning to the state under the
MBTA Communities law, which mandates cities and towns served by the MBTA
zone for multifamily housing
<https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/12/04/business/massachusetts-enacted-its-most-ambitious-housing-law-decades-now-hard-part-is-enforcing-it/?p1=Article_Inline_Text_Link&p1=Article_Inline_Text_Link>.
The Department of Housing and Community Development will now determine if
they satisfy the state guidelines.

The vote, although contested by a strong contingent of dissenting Town
Meeting members, was in part a response to the pain that more and more
Lexington residents are feeling as a result of the town’s escalating
housing costs, officials there said.

“Folks have realized that there’s nowhere in Lexington for their kids to
live if they want to move back after college,” said Planning Board chair
Bob Peters. “And we also have residents who have hit retirement age and
want to downsize, but can’t find anywhere in town to do that. The answer we
have in front of us is to build more multifamily housing.”

The zoning changes will allow for that multifamily housing in a dozen new
stretches of town, most of which are commercial areas. Depending on the
location, developers will be able to construct residential buildings that
range from three to six stories tall, and if the developer designates part
of the first floor for retail or commercial use, they’ll be able to build
higher than the zoning would otherwise allow. Town officials say the zones
are designed in a way that will preserve Lexington’s historical districts.

The new rules actually go further than the state guidelines
<https://www.mass.gov/info-details/multi-family-zoning-requirement-for-mbta-communities>,
rezoning 227 acres of land instead of the required roughly 80 acres. Under
the final MBTA Communities rules, Lexington needed to zone for an
additional 1,231 units of multifamily housing. Since 2012, building permits
have been issued for 825 units of new housing in Lexington, according to The
Boston Foundation’s Greater Boston Housing Report Card
<https://www.tbf.org/news-and-insights/reports/2022/october/2022-greater-boston-housing-report-card>.
Of those, only two were for multifamily units. The town’s new rules would
allow for many more.

Allowing for apartments and condos at this scale will be a big shift for a
town in which single-family homes make up well over 70 percent of the total
housing stock, though town officials believe the majority of Lexington’s
growth from the zoning will play out over the course of a decade. They also
say it’s a change that’s desperately needed. Last year, the median-priced
home there sold for $1.5 million, according to data from the Warren Group,
a real estate analysis firm, and more than 41 percent of Lexington
households spend at least 30 percent of their income on housing, according
to the housing report card.

“We have a housing crisis,” said Abby McCabe, the town’s planning director.
“This is our residents deciding to do something about it.”

Passing the new rules was not smooth sailing. Some residents called for the
town to flout MBTA Communities entirely, and others started a petition to
lower maximum building heights from what was originally proposed.

An amendment to lower the building heights put forth by the Planning Board
and reduce the size of the multifamily zones was presented during Town
Meeting deliberations, and failed by just six votes.

Another wrinkle: The zoning rules passed Lexington Town Meeting with
roughly 60 percent of the vote. Prior to the 2021 passage of the Housing
Choice law, pushed for years by then-Governor Charlie Baker, which lowered
the threshold to pass zoning changes at the town level from two-thirds to a
simple majority, that would’ve been a failing vote.

But Lexington’s new zoning signals that, while some communities have balked
at the MBTA Communities law or even said outright that they won’t follow
along, others — even wealthy towns that have historically built very little
— are working to meet the requirements.

“We think these changes are going to make our town a better place to live,”
said Peters.

On Fri, Apr 14, 2023 at 11:54 AM V Saleme <[email protected]> wrote:

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