Earlier in March I moderated a panel called “Bringing Back 2-to-4 Flats” at the Metropolitan Planning Council office, interviewing three panelists who are developers and designers for these venerable Chicago housing typology.
Two, three, and four-flats are super common in Chicago, representing about one fifth of the city’s dwelling units. These properties are the most likely to have lower rents and family-sized units, according to the Institute of Housing Studies. But Chicago’s zoning laws severely restrict where they can be built. Changing the zoning laws to allow 2- to 4-flats by right makes it easier to increase the city’s housing supply and grow the economy.
Watch the full panel and Q&A in the video below.
Meet the panelists
- Neelam Dwivedi is a real estate agent and small local homebuilder. She co-founded Nath Construction in 2018. She has developed numerous 3 and 4 flats, particularly in the Near West Side and East Garfield Park.
- Nick Serra is a small local homebuilder who founded Grace Street Renovation Lab in 2023 and has completed 15 rehab projects. He was previously a practicing attorney and disliked it so much he pivoted to real estate.
- Katherine Darnstadt founded Latent Design, an architecture and urbanism practice in 2010. I met Katherine in 2015 and I think the main thing I remember about her practice is the breadth of it. She’s said that the firm has worked on projects “at the bench, building, and block scale”.