On Friday, May 13, AIA New York and the Center for Architecture are hosting a half-day conference, “NYC’s Housing Crisis,” which aims to address the causes of and possible solutions to New York City’s escalating housing crisis. The city was already plagued by housing shortages and unaffordability before the pandemic, with more than half of New Yorkers unable to afford their rent and a 59 percent increase in the number of people living in the city’s shelters between 2009 and 2019. The pandemic has only exacerbated economic inequalities, and housing prices, after a brief dip in 2021, have returned to sky-high pre-pandemic levels. Since the federal government’s two-year eviction moratorium expired in March, landlords have been filing about 2,000 eviction cases weekly.
Mayor Eric Adams’s administration has made targeting homelessness a key issue, but critics say his punitive approach—clearing encampments and policing the subways—fails to address the root causes of the issue. Adams pledged an additional $177 million for the expansion of homeless services and shelters in his budget for this year, to be finalized at the end of June. He has also proposed allocating $22 billion to build and preserve New York’s affordable housing supply over the next decade–shy of a campaign promise to spend $4 billion a year–which housing advocates say is not nearly enough.
You have 0 complimentary articles remaining.
Unlimited access + premium benefits for as low as $1.99/month.