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How NYC's Affordable Housing Could Speed Up

Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s SPEED reforms target zoning, permits and housing lotteries to accelerate affordable housing.

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New York City will shorten affordable housing approvals and move-ins through new permitting and lottery reforms. (Peter Senzamici/Patch)

A new plan aims to shorten the City's affordable housing development process by overhauling environmental review, permitting and the housing lottery system, the Mamdani administration announced Wednesday.

The initiative, called Streamlining Procedures to Expedite Equitable Development, or SPEED, will reduce affordable housing timelines by about eight months citywide and by as much as two years for projects that require zoning changes, according to Mamdani.

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“These delays are not inevitable,” Mamdani said. “They are the result of broken systems and a failure of political will.”

The administration said the reforms target four phases of development: environmental review and planning, pre-development and financing, permitting and approvals and marketing and lease-up.

The City will cut the “pre-certification” process for many rezoning applications from roughly two years to six months.

Officials also plan to shorten permitting timelines for new construction and office-to-residential conversion projects by about five months.

Deputy Mayor for Housing and Planning Leila Bozorg said the administration will combine procedural changes with new investments to accelerate housing production.

“With these investments and procedural changes, we will cut months or even years off of the affordable housing development timeline — months that New Yorkers can spend in permanent housing instead of instability,” Bozorg said.

The reforms also reshape Housing Connect, the city’s affordable housing lottery system.

City officials said they will introduce immediate changes while building a longer-term system designed to simplify applications and speed approvals.

The administration aims to cut the time between construction completion and tenant move-in from 210 days to fewer than 100 days.

The SPEED reforms emerged from a task force Mamdani created through executive order on his first day in office.

The task force held roundtables with more than 100 developers, advocates, builders and trade organizations and reviewed more than 500 recommendations before finalizing the package, city officials said

None of the reforms require legislative approval or alter the city’s discretionary review process for development projects, according to the administration.

The reforms build on other housing initiatives launched by the administration, including the Expedited Land Use Review Procedure and the Neighborhood Builders Fast Track program.

How NYC Affordable Housing Gets Built

What Happens What SPEED Changes What Stays The Same
Environmental Review And Pre-Certification: Developers prepare studies, environmental reviews and zoning applications before entering the public review process City will cut pre-certification for many projects from about 2 years to 6 months by streamlining environmental review and agency coordination Projects still go through public review and discretionary approvals
Land Use Review / Rezoning:
Community boards, borough presidents, City Planning Commission and City Council review zoning changes
Separate reforms such as ELURP and Affordable Housing Fast Track shorten some affordable housing reviews to 90 days in qualifying districts Community boards still review projects; discretionary review process remains in place
Developer Selection On City-Owned Land:
HPD issues requests for proposals and selects development teams
Neighborhood Builders Fast Track pre-qualifies developers and cuts the RFP process by about 8 months Competitive selection process remains
Financing And Pre-Development:
Developers secure subsidies, tax credits and financing approvals from multiple agencies
SPEED coordinates agencies to reduce bottlenecks and overlaps during financing review Projects still must secure financing and comply with affordability rules
Permitting And Construction Approvals: Developers obtain Department of Buildings permits and related agency approvals City says permitting timelines for new construction and office-to-residential conversions will shrink by about 5 months Safety and building code requirements remain unchanged
Construction:
Buildings are constructed and inspected
SPEED does not directly shorten construction timelines Construction schedules, labor requirements and inspections remain
Lease-Up And Housing Lottery:
Applicants submit paperwork through Housing Connect and units are filled
Housing Connect overhaul aims to cut lease-up time from 210 days to fewer than 100 days and simplify applications Income verification and eligibility screening remain
Full Occupancy:
Buildings gradually fill units after opening
Faster approvals and placements aim to reduce vacancies and stabilize occupancy sooner Affordable housing compliance rules remain

Sources: NYC HPD Expedited Housing overview Enterprise Community Partners lease-up report

Key Numbers Behind The Reforms

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