DC Housing Board Approves Ward 7 Zoning Overhaul, Enables Mixed-Income Development
Board greenlights mid-rise development along Anacostia waterfront, but affordability protections face pushback from advocates.
Board greenlights mid-rise development along Anacostia waterfront, but affordability protections face pushback from advocates.

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The DC Zoning Commission voted 4-1 this week to reclassify a 12-block corridor stretching from the Congress Heights Metro station toward the Anacostia River, a decision that housing advocates say could reshape one of the city's most economically disadvantaged neighborhoods.
The rezoning permits developers to construct buildings up to 120 feet—roughly 12 stories—in areas previously capped at 65 feet. The move, championed by the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, aims to address the District's acute housing shortage while generating tax revenue for public schools and infrastructure.
"This is about density done right," said a spokesperson for the planning office, noting that the District's median rent has climbed to $2,100 monthly, pricing out thousands of longtime residents. Ward 7's median household income remains below $40,000, making it particularly vulnerable to displacement pressure.
The decision comes as the city grapples with competing priorities. A preliminary proposal would require 25 percent of units in new developments to remain affordable for 30 years—a rate housing advocates argue falls short of community needs but that some developers warn makes projects financially unfeasible. The final affordability framework remains under negotiation.
The rezoning affects several blocks near the Congress Heights Metro stop and extends along half-Street SE toward the Washington Navy Yard. Local organizations including the Anacostia Riverkeeper Foundation and Ward 7 Community Action Council have signaled cautious support, conditional on meaningful community benefits agreements.
"We've seen this pattern before," warned one community organizer, noting that Capitol Hill and Navy Yard-Ballpark neighborhoods experienced rapid gentrification following Metro-adjacent development. "We need ironclad protections, not promises."
The commission's decision also endorsed a companion initiative to streamline permit approvals for adaptive reuse projects converting defunct commercial buildings along Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue into residential spaces. City officials estimate the streamlined process could accelerate conversion of roughly 40 vacant structures across Ward 7.
The development comes as the DC Housing Authority prepares to release its updated Housing Equity Report next month, expected to detail displacement patterns across all eight wards and recommend policy responses.
The Zoning Commission will hold a public comment session on July 15 before issuing final recommendations to the City Council, which must approve the rezoning by September 30. Developers have already circled several parcels near the Metro station, with two preliminary proposals filed seeking approval for mixed-income projects totaling 850 units.
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