Open house in Englewood: The Future of ADU's and Zoning.


As home prices and rental rates continue to soar with little restraint across the metro area, a decidedly unsexy topic — accessory dwelling units — is generating more heat as communities look to the small living spaces on small lots for needed relief in an overheated real estate market.

On Tuesday night, Englewood will hold an open house on accessory dwelling units to get feedback from the public on what the rental units should look like and where in this city of 33,000 they should and should not be allowed.

According to the Denver Metro Association of Realtors, the average price in April of a single-family home in metro Denver reached a dizzying $487,974 — a new high. Meanwhile, rents in the metro area resumed their upward climb this year after pulling back somewhat last fall. The average apartment rents rose to $1,446 in May, up $19 over April’s average.

By virtue of their smaller size, accessory dwelling units tend to be cheaper to rent than conventional apartments. Englewood is proposing limiting the size of the units to 650 square feet. ADUs initially would be contained to the older parts of town, where alleys provide a natural access to the auxiliary homes.

The owner of the main home would have to live on the property, as a way to ensure that the landlord has skin in the game. They’ll need a permit to construct anything, and it will be inspected by inspectors, They’d look like the tiny house phenomenon.

While a home that small won’t work for a family of four, it could accommodate a single person or childless couple and take a little bit of pressure off the conventional apartment market.

Accessory dwelling units are not a foreign concept in the metro area. In 2010, Denver eased its rules on building “granny flats” or cottage houses in the city. Arvada first gave the green light to the dwelling units a decade ago and allows them in single-family-home neighborhoods anywhere in the city unless prohibited by homeowner associations.

There were 23 accessory dwelling units in Arvada in 2013. Now there are 77.

Whereas accessory dwelling units typically have been a convenient way of providing housing to an aging parent or a struggling child fresh out of school, an increasing number of units today are being rented to complete strangers. The rental income can help a homeowner offset the cost of monthly mortgage payments.

Inquiries about building accessory dwelling units have increased significantly in Englewood during the past few months, he said, with half a dozen property owners a week asking whether the city will lift its restrictions.

An early test of how they might work in this city is underway at Logan Street Residences, which the city approved for accessory dwelling units as part of a planned unit development. Westminster-based Shadow Creek Homes built three detached garage units fronting an alley just west of Logan Street. stay tuned...

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