Drive via sufficient neighborhoods in Los Angeles, and also you would possibly discover an odd phenomenon: In entrance of some newer condo and business buildings, the road is barely wider, and the sidewalk meanders across the indentation. If a number of properties on a block have been not too long ago redeveloped, the road begins to appear to be a jigsaw-puzzle piece, widening and narrowing repeatedly.
That’s as a result of new developments are sometimes mechanically required to dedicate a part of their property to the town for street enlargement — even when the street isn’t congested.
In idea, these spot avenue widenings are supposed to enhance visitors stream. In observe, as a result of improvement occurs sporadically, the parcel-by-parcel widenings find yourself taking out mature bushes, parkways and sidewalk house whereas offering little to no congestion reduction.
Worse, the mandate needlessly drives up the price of housing. In an evaluation of L.A.’s avenue dedication ordinance printed in 2016, UCLA city planning professor Michael Manville surveyed a number of builders and estimated that the street widening value them about $11,000 to $50,000 per unit.
“I’ve studied city laws for 20 years, and that is in all probability the dumbest regulation I’ve ever encountered,” Manville mentioned not too long ago.
Lawmakers are lastly starting to see spot avenue widening necessities for what they’re: zombie laws that don’t accomplish what was meant however are actually onerous to kill.
The state Legislature began attempting to slay the zombie this 12 months. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a invoice by Assemblymember Wendy Carrillo (D-Los Angeles) to restrict native governments’ energy to require that housing builders widen the roads in entrance of their initiatives. Companies should require avenue dedications if they will display their necessity.

A Google Road View picture of 1747 S. Barrington Ave. exhibits the street widening in entrance of a brand new condo constructing.
(Google Maps)
And this month, the Los Angeles Metropolis Council permitted reforms designed to tremendously scale back the variety of spot avenue widenings. Proposed two years in the past, the reforms will restrict the circumstances when roadway widening is required. For instance, the Bureau of Engineering will not mechanically mandate spot widening in established neighborhoods.
The council additionally adopted a suggestion to vary the municipal code in order that street and sidewalk adjustments are required provided that they’re wanted for good avenue design, environmental causes or to enhance the expertise of pedestrians and cyclists in addition to motorists.
That’s vital. For many years, Los Angeles prioritized drivers above all different street customers — and automobile speeds over security and quality-of-life considerations.
The town started requiring avenue dedications in 1961. Even then, the Division of Constructing and Security warned that the spot widenings would result in irregular avenue alignments, “thus hindering upkeep, drainage, and visitors stream,” Manville wrote in his evaluation. The concept was that properties can be repeatedly redeveloped and that the streets would finally attain new, constant widths.
Sixty-three years later, that hasn’t occurred. However builders have been ordered to cut down bushes, tear out grass parkways, transfer streetlights and energy poles, and even scale back sidewalk house — and for what? A few additional ft of asphalt that won’t even be huge sufficient for avenue parking.
Plus, there may be rising recognition that wider streets encourage motorists to hurry, which isn’t preferrred for protected, walkable and nice streets.
Los Angeles wants extra housing and safer streets. The town can’t afford to maintain zombie laws that defeat these targets on the books.