A landfill is no place for “missing middle housing”

In 2003, Decatur, Ga., playwright Valetta Anderson, her partner Cotis Weaver, and several neighbors sued the City of Decatur to prevent the redevelopment of an apartment building into high-end townhomes. The lawsuit and conversation it started could have been a turning point for Decatur to preserve affordable housing and diversity. Instead, the city went in a different direction.

Now, 20 years later, the home Anderson and Weaver lived in, along with hundreds of other affordable single- and multi-family homes have been demolished and sent to landfills. Earlier this year, the City of Decatur was forced to confront more than 20 years of policy missteps by amending its zoning ordinance to allow for so-called “missing middle housing.” The problem is, the city had lots of missing middle housing (and diversity).

Next City has published my latest article on gentrification in Decatur: “Our Missing Middle Housing Didn’t Just Go Missing. It Was Torn Down.”

Former Anderson and Weaver home, Decatur, Ga., January 2014. The townhomes that replaced the apartments at the center of the 2003 litigation are in the background. A developer bought the property later that year and demolished the home.
New home completed in 2015 on the former Anderson and Weaver property.

©2023 D.S. Rotenstein

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