Housing Abundance in California: Starter Home for the 21st century written over a photo of a what looks like new construction town homes.

What would it take to make housing, energy, and transportation affordable in California? Researchers argue that “abundance” requires smarter housing design, people-first transportation, and a more flexible, affordable energy system.

The UC Berkeley Possibility Lab’s report, What Would It Take to Make Housing, Energy, and Transportation Affordable in California?, argues that affordability is not a resource problem but a policy choice shaped by decades of scarcity-driven decision-making. Drawing on the Abundance Policy Report Series, the report features expert perspectives on housing, transportation, and energy to outline how California can move beyond zero-sum thinking and toward systems that meet people’s everyday needs.

Luskin Professor Paavo Monkkonen focuses on housing, calling for a paradigm shift in how California defines and builds homes. He argues that regulatory barriers and neighborhood opposition have constrained supply and limited housing options. Monkkonen advocates prioritizing high-quality multifamily housing and expanding the “missing middle” to create medium-density, mixed-use neighborhoods that support affordability, shared amenities, and new pathways to homeownership—reframing housing growth as a benefit rather than a threat.

Read the full CalMatters article in Knowledge Hub.

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