Austin's new attic anxieties

A backdoor NIMBY triumph.

Austin's new attic anxieties

Homebuilders in Austin say that a recent ruling by an obscure city board is going to make roofs uglier and more expensive.

The Board of Adjustment is a quasi-judicial panel that is not really intended to make policy, but it somewhat unintentionally did so at an Oct. 13 hearing. The board, composed of volunteers appointed by City Council, ruled that any attic space above 6 ft in height counts against the total allowable floor space in a house built under the HOME ordinance. Even attic floors that are not load-bearing or air conditioned now count against the Floor to Area Ratio (FAR), the key regulation that limits the size of buildings in city code.

The BoA was ruling on a building permit for a three-unit development submitted by an applicant in Central Austin who had drawn the ire of her neighbors, one of whom hired Bobby Levinski, an attorney with Save Our Springs, to represent them in objecting to the permit.

I'm not going to go into the details of the permit in question. What is important is the implication of the ruling, which cast aside almost two decades of building precedent and undermines the intent of zoning policies that passed City Council with near-unanimous approval.