All Content from Business Insider 09月20日 17:01
YIMBY大会汇聚千人 推动住房可负担性
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在美国新港举行的YIMBYtown大会汇聚了约1000名“我的后院是的”(yes in my backyard)运动的参与者,该运动致力于推动增加可负担住房。大会吸引了大量普通志愿者,他们利用业余时间学习如何倡导社区住房建设,并与全国同仁交流经验。尽管YIMBY运动取得了显著进展,但仍高度依赖志愿者的热情和投入。大会也凸显了该运动的广泛性和跨党派性,不同政治立场的参与者共同面对住房短缺问题,目标是建设更多可负担的家园,克服少数反对者的阻碍,代表“沉默的大多数”的声音。

🏠 **广泛参与的草根运动**: YIMBYtown大会吸引了约1000名来自“我的后院是的”运动的参与者,其中不乏大量普通志愿者,他们利用个人时间和资源,远赴新港参加会议,学习如何推动社区住房建设,并与其他倡导者交流经验。这表明该运动正日益壮大,并广泛吸引了希望改善住房状况的普通民众。

🤝 **跨党派的联盟与共同目标**: YIMBY运动展现出强大的跨党派吸引力,保守派强调自由市场和放松管制,进步派则聚焦于种族、经济和环境正义。尽管出发点不同,但所有参与者都共同面对着住房短缺的核心问题,并致力于实现更多可负担住房的目标,形成了一个多元但目标一致的联盟。

🗣️ **“沉默的大多数”与反对声音的博弈**: 北达科他州州长Kelly Armstrong指出,尽管增加住房建设、降低租金和房价受到普遍欢迎,但少数激进的“不是我的后院”(NIMBY)反对者却常常压制了“沉默的大多数”的声音。YIMBY运动的参与者们正是为了给这部分“沉默的大多数”提供发声的平台,并学习如何有效对抗阻碍住房发展的阻力。

📈 **运动的韧性与志愿者的核心作用**: YIMBY运动自2016年以来取得了多项重要胜利,包括在全美范围内推动后院小屋合法化、取消最低地块面积要求以及排除性单户住宅区划等。然而,这项运动的成功在很大程度上仍然依赖于志愿者的热情和不懈努力,他们是推动政策改变的关键力量,即使在面对高昂的会议费用和时间投入时,也展现出坚定的决心。

YIMBYtown conference attendees listen to North Dakota Gov. Kelly Armstrong talk.

Showing up to anything at 9 am on a Sunday is a tall order, at least for me. Paying hundreds of dollars for the privilege is another matter entirely.

But that's exactly what scores of attendees at the biggest pro-housing conference in America did last weekend in New Haven, Connecticut.

About 1,000 so-called YIMBYs — a label that stands for the pro-housing "yes in my backyard" movement — gathered from Sunday to Tuesday in crowded, windowless conference rooms in a downtown hotel to talk about how to build more housing and livable neighborhoods.

While there were plenty of professional researchers and advocates there, I was struck by how many were everyday people who took time off their day jobs and traveled hundreds of miles to attend YIMBYtown. They were there to learn how to push for more affordable housing in their communities and connect with others from across the country doing the same thing.

Brandon Stanaway, a 28-year-old statistician from Boston, was one of them. About a year ago, Stanaway started his own all-volunteer pro-housing group, Allston-Brighton Housing Action, that organizes local YIMBYs to do what NIMBYs — "not in my backyard" proponents — have done for far longer: speak at public meetings, call their local elected officials, and convince other neighbors to join them.

"The NIMBYs do it on their own dime, too," Stanaway said. "Own dime, own time — they just have a lot more of it."

Stanaway argued that countering the disproportionately older, wealthier homeowners who have the time and resources to fight against denser, affordable housing in their communities requires lots of volunteers.

At the conference, Stanaway met lots of other volunteers and part-time advocates, or people who started out that way before becoming professional YIMBYs. "I think everyone here is kind of doing it on their own time, in some way, shape, or form," he said.

While the pro-housing cause has grown substantially and has claimed a slew of significant wins since YIMBYtown was first held in 2016, it's still powered by volunteers. One California housing activist told me he estimated a plurality of conference attendees were there on their own time.

Michael Larkin, a 40-year-old intellectual property specialist from the Washington, DC, suburbs, attended YIMBYtown on his own dime. He helps lead a pro-housing group in Montgomery County, Maryland, and said he felt buoyed by all the like-minded people he'd met in New Haven.

"It's a very powerful thing to feel that, one way or another, everyone's pulling for each other," Larkin said.

YIMBYtown 2025's slogan was "pro-homes, pro-riders, pro-pizza," in a nod to New Haven's favorite food.

The 'silent majority'

The YIMBY cause has been on a winning streak in recent years, from legalizing backyard cottages in states across the US to ending minimum lot size requirements and exclusionary single-family zoning, regulations that have historically prohibited denser housing.

The success is in large part because the movement is such a big tent.

Self-described YIMBYs are a diverse group — and notably bipartisan. At YIMBYtown, American Enterprise Institute staffers rubbed shoulders with members of the New York chapter of the Democratic Socialists of America.

While progressive YIMBYs frame their mission around racial, economic, and environmental justice, conservatives focus on deregulation, free markets, and unshackling property owners. They're all facing the same key problem: a shortage of housing, and have the same goal: more affordable homes.

Elijah Fox, communications director for New York City Councilmember Chi Ossé, talks about how he uses video to message about housing policy.

On Monday morning, North Dakota Gov. Kelly Armstrong, a Republican, told a packed auditorium that building more housing, bringing down rents and home prices, and making cities and neighborhoods more livable are overwhelmingly popular. But a small minority of passionate NIMBYs are drowning out the "silent majority."

That's because most regular people don't have the time to testify at their local community board meeting, or even read up on the latest fight over a proposed apartment building or bike lane.

"Their life doesn't revolve around political messaging on a random Wednesday at 1 o'clock," Armstrong said.

When I chatted with Armstrong after his speech, he told me he considers it his responsibility to convince local and state lawmakers that, despite the loud critics, they won't be punished for supporting new housing and infrastructure projects, from data centers in rural areas to homeless shelters in cities.

A small minority of passionate NIMBYs are still drowning out the "silent majority," North Dakota Gov. Kelly Armstrong told the conference crowd.

YIMBYtown attracted some of that previously silent majority.

Douglas Coffin, a 71-year-old New Haven resident, came to the conference because, as a retiree, he finally has time to learn more about the city he's called home for more than 50 years. He was curious about how to build more affordable housing and wanted to understand why his city is changing the way it is.

"I think most people would consider themselves a YIMBY until they see something that they don't like," he said. "So far, I haven't seen that."

Though he said he loves driving, and certain bike lanes and traffic calming measures frustrate him.

"But I'm adjusting," he added.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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YIMBY 住房可负担性 可负担住房 房地产 社区发展 Housing Affordability Affordable Housing Real Estate Community Development
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