Donate Newsletters

Housing + Cities

More homes, in all shapes and sizes, for all our neighbors.

Imagine neighborhoods where everyone who serves the community, from teachers to healthcare aides to baristas, can afford to live near their jobs. Where kids can safely walk to school. Where local entrepreneurs can open up shop. Where downsizing grandparents and young people starting out can find options right for them. This isn’t utopian thinking; it’s housing abundance, and it’s within reach.

Sightline Institute is rewriting the costly, outdated rules that limit the kinds of communities we can create across Cascadia. Because when people can afford to live near family and friends, local schools, transit options, and good jobs, they cut their energy use and climate impacts. We’re helping the region—one backyard cottage or small apartment building at a time—grow in ways that give people more options to do so. 

Because Cascadians deserve more affordable, convenient choices in the places they love to call home. 

Featured priorities 

⤴️ Elevate state-level solutions to address statewide housing shortages, as Montana, Oregon, and Washington have done in recent years 

🅿️ Free communities from costly parking mandates, returning flexibility to small local homebuilders and entrepreneurs (example: Washington state

✂️ Cut red tape that drags out build times, bloats costs, and outlaws lower-cost housing types, like co-living homes and tiny homes on wheels 

🌇 Legalize apartments in more places, making the most of public transit investments and leveraging the power of funded inclusionary zoning  

🛗 Advance accessibility for older adults and people with disabilities, including by allowing for smaller, lower-cost elevators in smaller apartment buildings 

📣 Deploy research-backed and road-tested messaging to move the needle in public conversations about housing and parking  

🥇 NOTE: This video takes the gold! We tested the messages in this video, via Sightline polling and focus groups. Then, academic researchers at UC Davis, UC Santa Barbara, and Tulane University empirically measured the impact of the video against other pro-housing messages. They found that the effect of this video on land-use preferences was greater than three times larger than typical effect of a persuasive political communication.  

Get the latest

Hear directly from our Housing and Cities experts, including behind-the-scenes context and analysis (delivered approx. monthly). 

Latest research + analysis

Yes, a Land Value Tax Is Possible in Washington State

A new report modeling a property tax building exemption in Spokane rebalances incentives toward community goals, encouraging homebuilding and discouraging in-city vacant land speculation.

Read More

Latest articles

Yes, a Land Value Tax Is Possible in Washington State

A new report modeling a property tax building exemption in Spokane rebalances incentives toward community goals, encouraging homebuilding and discouraging in-city vacant land speculation.
Read More

Washington Passes First Statewide Scissor Stair Reform

The measure ushers in more light-filled, infill-suited apartment homes—and sets a model for other states.
Read More

Washington State’s Parking Reform Is Already Working

Cities are laying the groundwork for more homes thanks to new flexibility on parking—with other states taking note.
Read More

Climate Is Stuck, Housing Isn’t

Why apartments may be the most powerful domestic climate move of the Trump years.
Read More

View All

Meet the Team

Dan Bertolet

Dan Bertolet

Senior Director of Housing + Cities

Dan is passionate about creating cities that welcome people of all incomes and tread lightly on the planet.

Michael Andersen

Michael Andersen

Director, Cities + Towns

Michael writes about ways better municipal policy can help break poverty cycles, with a focus on housing and transportation.

Catie Gould

Catie Gould

Senior Researcher

Catie is a Senior Researcher for Sightline Institute, specializing in parking policy.

Anna Fahey

Anna Fahey

Principal Director of Strategy

Anna leads Sightline Institute’s communications, marketing, and messaging strategies, and coordinates legislative campaigns.

Julia Metz

Fellow

Julia is a Fellow with Sightline bringing nearly a decade of experience in the housing field. 

Daniel Oleksiuk

Fellow

Daniel is a Fellow for Sightline Institute and a lawyer, writer, and organizer. 

Photo of Danny Tenebaum

Danny Tenenbaum

Contributor

Danny is a Contributor with Sightline Institute working on housing and land use policy in his home state of Montana.

Resources for Journalists

Our researchers can provide commentary, interviews, story ideas, background information, or serve as expert sources across our program areas. If we can’t comment on an issue ourselves, chances are we know someone who can.

The math is simple. When people choose to live closer to each other, they voluntarily cut their energy use in half. When people are able to make that choice, it makes our planet healthier, our communities more prosperous, and our society more fair. Literally everybody wins.  

But over the years, we’ve buried deep in our laws a variety of blocks to this voluntary sustainable decision: the innately human choice to be closer to one other. Sometimes this has happened with the best intentions, and other times our human tendencies have driven us to hoard and to exclude. Sightline’s Housing and Cities team identifies agreements across ideological lines that give Cascadians the freedom to make the sustainable choices so many of us want. 

Learn more about our Housing + Cities research projects below.

Beyond parking mandates

Data and insights on the growing movement to break free from parking mandates

Resource: Middle Housing Photos

Our Modest Middle Homes Library is a resource for abundant housing advocates, urbanists, planners, and journalists.

Video: 90-second housing explainers

A decade of successes against fossil fuel exports in Cascadia.

Author Q&A: Housing and homelessness

Research and policy recommendations to prune the gas system, scale electrification, and protect ratepayers.

50%

Reduction in energy use by people living in cities (needs more context)

$30-50,000

Cost of a structured parking space

Latest research + analysis

Housing + Cities

Yes, a Land Value Tax Is Possible in Washington State

A new report modeling a property tax building exemption in Spokane rebalances incentives toward community goals, encouraging homebuilding and discouraging in-city vacant land speculation.

Read More

×