Zoned Out: Zoning and Rhode Island’s housing shortage

Today, thousands of people in Rhode Island are homeless, thousands more homeowners and renters are living in unsecure conditions, and home prices continue to skyrocket. 

One of the biggest factors stifling what most agree is a need to build more housing is a complicated one: zoning.

“The zoning component is absolutely, really at the core of the housing crisis.”

Melina Lodge, executive director of Housing Network of Rhode Island

There are certain towns that have made it very, very clear that building at density was not what they wanted.

Colin Penney, executive director of South County Habitat for Humanity

Challenges to planning growth and planning development are real in Rhode Island and real in many parts of the country where zoning has become more of an exclusionary tool — rather than a good planning tool and an inclusionary tool to build housing of all income levels.

Brenda Clement, executive director of HousingWorks RI

Local zoning laws often restrict what kind of housing can be built where — or if it can be built at all. So what can be done? That’s what our new series is about.


How large-lot zoning contributes to Rhode Island’s big housing shortfall

Want to build a home in Rhode Island? In many areas of the state, there’s a good chance you’re going to need more land than you might expect – a lot more.

MORE FROM Zoned Out

A RI town manager on how the state should, and shouldn’t, spur more housing

Andy Nota, town manager of East Greenwich, says state mandates are difficult for the state’s 39 municipalities.

Races to watch in Tuesday’s state primary, how local zoning rules stifle housing production, and more

Also on this week’s show: how the old mill buildings of Providence’s industrial past shaped the city’s 1990s art renaissance, and our picks for what to do this week.

As state lawmakers look to boost housing, zoning remains a pitched political battle in Rhode Island

The powerful speaker of the Rhode Island House has made housing a priority. But some towns object to losing local control.

Something went wrong. Please refresh the page and/or try again.


Alex Nunes

Bureau Chief and South County Reporter

Joe Tasca

Producer, host

Jeremy Bernfeld

Senior Editor for Investigations