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Austin, Texas, outlaws windowless bedrooms

MFPRO+ News

Austin, Texas, outlaws windowless bedrooms

For 20 years, developers had built thousands of such rooms, mostly targeted for college students.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | May 24, 2024
Photo by Pixabay

Photo by Pixabay

Austin, Texas will no longer allow developers to build windowless bedrooms.

For at least two decades, the city had permitted developers to build thousands of windowless bedrooms. Most of these units are located in apartments serving students in the neighborhood directly west of the University of Texas at Austin.

Absent a window requirement, developers were able to build more bedrooms and receive more rent. Professors and students have been advocating to make bedroom windows mandatory over concern for students’ mental health. Studies show access to natural light increases alertness and decreases depressive symptoms.

The city’s modified building code will allow a bedroom window that pulls in borrowed light— a window that faces another room with natural light, borrowing the light from elsewhere.

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AEC inspections are the key to financially viable office to residential adaptive reuse projects

About a year ago our industry was abuzz with an idea that seemed like a one-shot miracle cure for both the shockingly high rate of office vacancies and the worsening housing shortage. The seemingly simple idea of converting empty office buildings to multifamily residential seemed like an easy and elegant solution. However, in the intervening months we’ve seen only a handful of these conversions, despite near universal enthusiasm for the concept. 




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