Sorry, I haven't been checking Bluesky! I updated to October data on Jan 14
Sorry, I haven't been checking Bluesky! I updated to October data on Jan 14
We don't have the full 2025 stats yet because of the government shutdown, but as of August 2025 Detroit was on track for another banger year of housing permitting
housingdata.app/places/MI/De...
The Anthropic Biology of a LLM paper had examples of writing poems where at the start of a line, the KV cache already pointed toward words it might want to end the line with (and I think the set of words narrowed as it got closer to the end of the line)
No ziggurats!
this is like, playing all the diatonic triads in sequence?
SB 35 doesn't let you ignore the city's inclusionary rate
leginfo.legislature.ca.gov/faces/codes_...
Rise and Fall of American Growth, p. 114 has this chart
Wake up babe new Jeremy Bernstein just dropped
Yep, thanks!!
Can you make these public?
Ahh okay thanks, that makes sense!
These are the only examples I've seen
bsky.app/profile/cohe...
bsky.app/profile/cohe...
Both cases refer to the "aggregate density" or "total capacity for units and floor area" as specified in Section 65912.157, and 65912.157 makes no reference to low-resource areas
My read is that either you meet 50% of SB 79 capacity throughout the city, and then all low-income sites are exempt, or you meet 40% of SB 79 capacity near a majority low-resource stop, and then other sites around that stop are exempt
(the word "low resource" is not used anywhere else in the bill)
I'm not sure. TOC only gives a 35-80% density increase. It does nothing in single-family zones, and in duplex zones (which are a big fraction of South LA near transit) it only allows 3-4 units.
To comply, TOC would have to allow 40-60 du/acre on average across all SB 79 sites
They can, but because low resource is like 75% of the transit stops in LA, they would need to go to 200% of SB 79 density in the non-low-resource stops to reach 50% of SB 79 zoned capacity overall
3 stories in all single family areas near transit statewide (and taller if you use SDBL) is already a huge accomplishment and would have been unthinkable 5 years ago! I think of that as the main accomplishment, and the fact that it'll be 5-7 stories in the 2030s as the cherry on top
IMO the low resource exclusions aren't that big, it just means cities can pass an alternative plan this RHNA cycle with 40% of SB79 density in low resource areas and 50% in other areas (or <40% in low resource if they do >50% in other areas). And they still have to get to 100% in the 2030s
This is awesome
Fair Park?
is that the sequel to Her?
Wait that's awesome!! IIRC Seattle housing production fell when they added neighborhood villages and MHA at the same time, great that 5 years later people agree the latter was a bad idea
Why don't these zones have MHA? So formerly single-family lots don't have MHA but formerly commercial/multifamily lots have it?
This is wild to me, but really good to know! If this pattern continues to hold after this rezoning I'm sure Building Code Twitter will have great case studies to motivate further building code improvements
(and anti-YIMBYs will have great examples to point to about why upzoning doesn't work)
G!
So FAR 1.6 townhouses are more profitable than FAR 2 apartments? Is the fee-simple/detached premium just that big??
(Would 6 or 8 larger units be more profitable than 10 1000 sq ft units?)
whoa that's insane!! what's the typical SFH lot size? and how much MHA is required?
He said "he might not be SAYING that now" not "he might not be saying that NOW"
This one doesn't sound like a joke in the delivery
www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUc3...
Where is this?