Laura Culbertson doesn't need a lot of space to live large in Minneapolis.
The 34-year-old account executive for the Minnesota Vikings lives in a 495-square-foot apartment downtown near the Mississippi River, with plans to move to an even smaller one this fall. The lack of space is made up for by a ton of building amenities, plus proximity to an urban core.
"I pack my life, my schedule, with fun things to do," she said. "So I'm rarely home."
Development officials at Minneapolis City Hall are now considering a rule change that could help bring denser housing projects with smaller living spaces to neighborhoods outside of downtown, as city leaders strive to boost the city's population. The proposal coincides with national trends toward so-called micro-apartments on the coasts, which haven't taken hold in Minneapolis but did inspire a project here with studios as small as 370 square feet.
The change, slated for discussion at the city planning commission Monday night, would eliminate a provision that restricts the number of units in a building by defining how many can fit on a given plot of land. The provision, which doesn't apply downtown, is one of several restrictions on residential density built into the city's zoning code.
Restricting the number of units sometimes has strange consequences. The city might approve a building with 50 two-bedroom apartments, for example, but not the same building with 100 one-bedroom units.
"[The change] allows higher density in the city," said Ted Tucker, president of the planning commission, an influential citizen advisory board. "But it also allows for smaller units to be developed affordably. We don't want a situation where only the very well off can afford to live in the center of the city."
The planning commission determined that the change was necessary after repeatedly granting developers exemptions from the rule, known technically as "minimum lot area per dwelling unit" or MLA.