How Will DC’s New Zoning Rules on Building Measurements Affect Developers?
· August 22, 2018by Nena Perry-Brown
The update to DC's zoning regulations in 2016 certainly
accomplished a lot, but the amendments to the zoning code also contained some gaps.
Last week, a suite of edits clarifying measurement of calculations such as
density and gross floor area went into effect.
The Zoning
Commission approved regulations
that clarify the current measurement rules related to height, stories, and
floor area ratio for properties in DC. Starting August 17th, the Department of
Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA) adopted these definitions and amendments
for the agency's forthcoming review of building permits.
The
impetus behind these new regulations were the vaguely-defined and undefined
terms that created room for real estate developers to potentially take
advantage of loopholes and effectively add a floor to new projects in DC. For
example, the lack of an explicit direction in calculating grade could enable
developers to measure a building's height based on a favorable measuring point
which could allow them to potentially push through a building several inches
taller than is allowable.
Another
loophole used to reduce the calculated density or floor area ratio of a project
was the line between "basements", which contribute to those
calculation, and "cellars", which do not. In order to
distinguish the two, the new regulations define the measuring surface as
the “finished floor of the ground floor" rather than the ceiling of the
lower level; this avoids use of dropped ceilings, or secondary ceilings hung
beneath the ceiling, to achieve cellar height in what would otherwise be a
basement. The suspicion that the cellar loophole was being exploited was a
recurrent cause of concern for some ANCs during the project review process, a
fact some ANCs commented on for the record as the new zoning regs were debated.
...
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Correction: An
earlier version of this article stated that habitable cellar space will be part
of GFA and density calculations; it is no longer omitted from counting toward
GFA and density.
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