30.00% - Most of Seattle should be upzoned — not to highrise density, but to gentle density: duplexes, accessory dwelling units, small apartment buildings.
27.50% - Parks, greenways, and open plazas aren't luxuries — density works better when people have space to decompress, and open space belongs in the urban plan, not squeezed out by development pressure.
22.50% - There's a point where adding more people to a fixed space creates costs faster than benefits — good planning finds that optimum rather than just chasing maximum density.
20.00% - Duplexes, triplexes, townhouses, and mid-rise apartments should be the baseline across Seattle — upzoning as the default, let the market build what people need.
Universal triplex zoning would allow three households where one was permitted, with minimal change to the streetscape.
55.00% - There's a point where adding more people to a fixed space creates costs faster than benefits — good planning finds that optimum rather than just chasing maximum density.
45.00% - Parks, greenways, and open plazas aren't luxuries — density works better when people have space to decompress, and open space belongs in the urban plan, not squeezed out by development pressure.
50.00% - Universal triplex zoning would allow three households where one was permitted, with minimal change to the streetscape.
50.00% - A triplex barely alters a streetscape while tripling the number of permitted households.
0.00% - The minor neighborhood in Seattle should be zoned for all triplexes.