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Accessory
Dwelling Units Add Flexibility and Affordability
New
Urban News - December 2001
In several new urban communities,
accessory dwelling units are strong sellers and offer benefits to both
home owners and developers.
Accessory dwelling units (ADUs) appear
under many aliases — granny flats, garage apartments, carriage houses,
ancillary units — and they almost invariably show up on a checklist of
what sets new urban communities apart from conventional subdivisions. They
are by no means ubiquitous, but developers from diverse projects report
that granny flats have become a popular amenity and an important selling
point.
For some home owners, the most attractive
aspect of ADUs is the potential for extra income from renting out the
unit. Other home owners view the extra space as a flexible addition that
can be used as a home office, as lodging for teenage children or elderly
family members, or as a guest room with great privacy.
From a developer’s perspective, ADUs
provide an extra tier of housing options — affordable units that can
attract people from diverse age and income groups. Another benefit is
safer and more lively alleys. With more “eyes on the street,” children
and adults are more likely to use the alley for play and socialization.
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Photo
courtesy of Kiki Wallace
Examples of the great variety
of accessory dwelling units being built in new urban communities.
Top, a garage apartment in Prospect in Longmont, Colorado, and
below, a granny flat attached to a live/work building in Fairview
Village in Fairview, Oregon.
Photo courtesy of Holt &
Haugh
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Higher density
Moreover, “accessory units are an easy way to get more people in the
same area and therefore support low vehicle miles traveled and all of the
good environmental outcomes from density,” says developer Bob Chapman.
“Accessory units offer density without making the street appear
overbuilt.” In the infill project Trinity Heights, which Chapman is
developing with architect Milton Grenfell, garage apartments have been
added to 15 of the 24 single homes. Because Chapman and Grenfell want to
encourage builders — who generally have no experience with granny flats
— to construct ADUs, they offer a financial incentive. Instead of
charging builders a per lot fee, the developers ask for 17 percent of the
home sale price. For the ADU upgrade, however, builders are assessed only
6 percent of the sales revenue.
Regulations vary on ADUs, but there are a
few ground rules that apply in most cases. The unit must be under the same
ownership as the principal building, and there is typically a requirement
for at least one extra off-street parking space. In most projects, the
units are considered part of the main house and do not count toward the
overall density. “We were very serious about this during permitting,”
says Joel Embry, developer of Amelia Park in Fernandina Beach, Florida.
“To count a garage apartment as a separate dwelling unit raises the
public’s impression of the density in a way that it is not actually
occurring.” In most projects, ADUs are restricted to specific lots or
housing types, but these rules vary considerably.
ADUs are generally not counted toward
maximum density requirements, and Chapman explains why. “The developer
will always choose to make $20,000 on a house rather than $4,000 on a
garage apartment. So you kill any chance of them being built if they are
included.”
The Prospect example
One exception to the rule is Prospect, a project in Longmont, Colorado.
According to developer Kiki Wallace, the city can collect extra impact
fees by counting the garage apartments as independent dwellings. The
typical impact fee for a home in Prospect is $18,000, and an ADU can put
in another $6,000 in city coffers. “It works out just fine, because I
have 570 density units for 80 acres and I am not going to use them all,”
Wallace says.
While he had no problems getting
permission to build ADUs, the city has struggled with keeping track of the
extra units and therefore discourage other developers from including them
in new projects. “It was painful for the city to begin with,” Wallace
says, but it now has a system that prevents ADUs, and the impact fees,
from falling through the cracks.
Despite high impact fees, ADUs have been
very successful in Prospect — out of the approximately 110 homes
completed, 40 have finished garage apartments. Builders usually include an
unfinished shell above the garage, and charge about $50,000 for the
average upgrade. Most units are in the 650 sq. ft. range, but one 950 sq.
ft. unit has been built over a three-car garage.
With an average rent of $1,000, the
income potential has become a major driver for the ADUs, Wallace says.
“Most people have the idea that they are going to use it for a home
office. About half build it for that reason, but I’d say that all of
them end up renting it out.”
Some public agencies that seek to
encourage granny flats, but do not wish to give an open-ended permission,
have simply capped their construction at a certain percentage of home
sites. Such restrictions are placed on Fairview Village, Highlands Garden
Village, and Hometown Oswego.
Help with the mortgage
The benefit to the home owner can be substantial. In Courtside Village, a
neighborhood in Santa Rosa, California, garage apartments are included
with every single-family home located on an alley. To date, 50 units have
been completed, and developer and designer Alan Cohen estimates that half
the 600 sq. ft., one-bedroom apartments are rented out at a rate of $850
to $900. The alley homes currently sell for $390,000, including the ADU.
Assuming a 15 percent down payment and a 30-year mortgage at 7 percent,
Cohen calculates the monthly mortgage to be $2,205. A rental fee of $900
covers 41 percent of the mortgage. Cohen adds that conventional developers
in the area have noticed the success of Courtside’s ADUs, and have begun
to build them in other subdivisions.
However, the calculation of more interest
might be whether the rental covers the extra cost of the upgrade. In
Trinity Heights, the addition of a garage and an apartment costs from
$37,000 to $43,000 (the price of the garage alone is about $15,000). Since
the apartments rent out for $700/month, the home owner can recoup about
double the mortgage on the ADU while paying for the two-car garage
simultaneously — one reason for the units’ popularity. The upgrade
cost in Trinity Heights is at the lower end, however. Typically, the price
of the garage is included in the price of the primary structure, and
upgrades range from $40,000 to $65,000. Nevertheless, rental fees
typically cover the extra monthly mortgage for the ADU, and then some.
Developers are also seeing examples of
home owners who move into the garage apartment and rent out the principal
building. This strategy works as a holding pattern for people who plan to
retire to Amelia Park, for example. The garage apartment becomes a weekend
home, while the principal townhouse is a steady source of income until
retirement.
Access and amenities
Developers and builders use a variety of strategies for access to ADUs. In
Orenco Station (Hillsboro, Oregon) the choice of exterior stairs allows
for the addition of a small porch in front of the first-floor entrance to
the unit. Some entrances face the side yard of the home, while those at
the end of blocks face the street. “These are better for a home office
or a rental,” says Mike Mehaffy of PacTrust, the developer.
In Courtside Village, the stairs are
internal, and the entrance faces the extra parking pad off the alley. This
offers homeowners and tenants the greatest degree of privacy. An unusual
approach is used in the largest units in Amelia Park, those built over
attached, three-car garages. They come with a separate entrance within the
garage, where one of the parking spaces is reserved for the tenant.
The basic amenities in most ADUs include
a bedroom, a bath, and a small kitchen. Many developers offer a range of
options, from loft units to more highly finished versions with separate
rooms. Hometown Oswego in Illinois has a few 500 sq. ft. units that
feature a kitchen, separate living rooms and bedrooms, and walk-in
closets. “People love them, “ says developer Perry Bigelow, “it’s
the most efficient use of space we offer.”
Municipal regulations are a potential
hurdle for developers. Even though Trinity Heights is an infill project in
the City of Durham, the city charter had to be amended to allow accessory
units to be built. Even with this amendment, the local law stated that the
units could not be within 15 feet of the property line, even at the back
alley. This shifted the units toward the middle of the lot, reducing
usable yard space. (Fortunately, Trinity Heights lots are 140 feet deep).
In Portland, on the other hand, the
regional planning authority now allows ADUs in all area jurisdictions.
“It is expected to help with the supply of affordable residences and to
contribute to a more resource-efficient development pattern,” Mehaffy
explains.
Tucked away behind homes, ADUs tend to
fly under the radar, but in the projects where they have taken hold,
developers are uniformly positive about their impact. “They are one of
our real success stories,” says Rick Holt, one of the developers of
Fairview Village near Portland, Oregon. “We’ve added them to rowhouses
as well as single-family homes and they have introduced a greater blend of
people in our community.” Ninety percent of the ADUs in Fairview Village
are rented out.
“In Amelia Park, we are discovering
that when people live in the garage apartments, the alley thrives as a
civic location,” Embry says. “Also, we are achieving the mix of
affordability that we want on an inclusionary basis, rather than through
the pods of the conventional subdivision. It’s a practical way of
achieving one of the more elusive goals of the New Urbanism.”
http://www.newurbannews.com/accessory.html
Reprinted with
permission from the New Urban News. |