In this Book

The Politics of Staying Put: Condo Conversion and Tenant Right-to-Buy in Washington, DC

Book
2016
summary

When cities gentrify, it can be hard for working-class and low-income residents to stay put. Rising rents and property taxes make buildings unaffordable, or landlords may sell buildings to investors interested in redeveloping them into luxury condos. 

In her engaging study The Politics of Staying Put, Carolyn Gallaher focuses on a formal, city-sponsored initiative—The Tenant Opportunity to Purchase Act (TOPA)—that helps people keep their homes. This law, unique to the District of Columbia, allows tenants in apartment buildings contracted for sale the right to refuse the sale and purchase the building instead. In the hands of tenants, a process that would usually hurt them—conversion to a condominium or cooperative—can instead help them.  

Taking a broad, city-wide assessment of TOPA, Gallaher follows seven buildings through the program’s process. She measures the law’s level of success and its constraints. Her findingshave relevance for debates in urban affairs about condo conversion, urban local autonomy, and displacement. 

Table of Contents

Cover

Half-title, Title, Series information, Copyright

pp. i-iv

Contents

pp. v-vi

Acknowledgments

pp. vii-xii

1. Staying Put in the New DC

pp. 1-32

2. From Bullets to Cocktails: A Capital Transformation

pp. 33-66

3. Gentrification and Its Discontents

pp. 67-89

4. The Rental Housing Conversion and Sale Act of 1980

pp. 90-105

5. Sample Conversions and Metrics of Analysis

pp. 106-119

6. Displacement Mitigation and Its Limits

pp. 120-157

7. Markets, Politics, and Other Obstacles to Low-Income Home Ownership

pp. 158-180

8. “95/5”: The TOPA Sidestep

pp. 181-208

9. Is TOPA the Politics of Staying Put We Want?

pp. 209-230

Appendix 1: Glossary of Terms

pp. 231-232

Appendix 2: A Short Primer on Condominiums

pp. 233-238

Appendix 3: Interviews

pp. 239-240

References

pp. 241-258

Index

pp. 259-266
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