Bloomberg CityLab examined the growing effort to make housing affordability and underproduction a more visible national policy issue. The piece looked at organizations trying to move housing from a specialist concern into the center of public debate.
The article situated Up for Growth within that broader push, highlighting the group's early work on housing underproduction and the case for building more homes through smarter growth and greater density near jobs and transit. It also connected that work to a wider coalition across business, environmental, philanthropic, and housing organizations.
I was quoted in the piece on the need to educate federal policymakers and rebuild a stronger understanding of urban infill and housing production. The broader question running through the article still matters today: how to turn housing from a local pain point into a durable national priority.
The reporting belongs to Bloomberg CityLab; the read here is mine.