I’d agree with Nick.

Regards,

SRK

Steven R. Kanner, MD
Lincoln, MA
From: Lincoln <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Nick Gardner
Sent: Sunday, October 12, 2025 8:59 PM
To: Sara Mattes <[email protected]>
Cc: Lincoln Talk <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [LincolnTalk] Truly affordable housing .

> But, we need to understand what the market is seeking.

The free market is usually pretty good at that. Developers tend to build 
properties because they will make money.

> Do families want to move to a town like Lincoln to live in multistory units?

Probably! But developers tend to do that sort of research before spending 
millions on a new development.

> Many families, in order to have more of the traditional single family home, 
> are moving further and further out.
It is not just cost, but what is seen as desirable.
Can we better explore the type of units that will meet wants and needs,  and 
not just numbers.

The issue is simply that single family houses take up a lot of land, and land 
plus transport are the true determining factors here. I can't get a single 
family home in manhattan because there simply isn't the land for it. As the 
population of the greater Boston area goes up, there will be less and less 
places close to Boston that can sustain affordable single family detached homes 
on sizable lots.

> I look at Denver that has built many, many multi-story units that are going 
> vacant, while families push further and further away from the city.
The urban sprawl is stressing municipal services and water resources.

Great thing about multi-family homes is that they put much less stress on 
things like water resources and municipal services than new single family home 
developments do. I'm not worried about vacant housing right now, given how big 
of a housing crisis there is in the area. Plus, new developments pay large 
amounts of fees and property taxes towards maintaining and upgrading aging 
municipal services.

Simply put, there's only so much land within a decent transit or drive of 
Boston/Cambridge, where many people have jobs they need to get to. So this 
constrains how far away people will live, and we just need to build more 
housing. The best way to do that is to build housing across the whole spectrum. 
More multi-family multi-story developments, more rowhomes, more ADUs, more 
splitting of lots to build second homes on the lot, and more development of 
vacant lots. Ideally some of those units will be affordable by design, but the 
best path towards affordability is simply more housing, however we can get it.

-Nick Gardner

On Sun, Oct 12, 2025 at 8:46 PM Sara Mattes 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Yes!
But, we need to understand what the market is seeking.
Do families want to move to a town like Lincoln to live in multistory units?
We don’t know.
Many families, in order to have more of the traditional single family home, are 
moving further and further out.
It is not just cost, but what is seen as desirable.
Can we better explore the type of units that will meet wants and needs,  and 
not just numbers.

I look at Denver that has built many, many multi-story units that are going 
vacant, while families push further and further away from the city.
The urban sprawl is stressing municipal services and water resources.

How do meet desire with creativity?





On Oct 12, 2025, at 6:52 PM, Nick Gardner 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Personally, sure, I wouldn't mind something like this near me. My general 
philosophy is that more housing is better, from the cheapest options like 
manufactured and mobile homes, all the way up to multi-story single family 
developments. More building across the spectrum is the only true way to solve 
the housing crisis (but much better transit would help too!).

-Nick Gardner

On Sun, Oct 12, 2025 at 6:41 PM Sara Mattes 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Would Lincoln entertain seeking locations for these truly affordable options?

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38' Park Model<https://www.facebook.com/share/17UXVB9fPC/>
facebook.com<https://www.facebook.com/share/17UXVB9fPC/>

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