Accessory Apartments and Dwelling Units

Learn more about creating an accessory dwelling in your basement, above or in a garage or by building a new freestanding structure.

An Accessory Dwelling, also known as an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU), is a secondary structure or apartment on a single family lot. It has it’s own kitchen, bathroom and a separate entrance. The unit can be attached to the main house or detached.

Accessory Apartment. Converting a basement in a rowhouse or a single family house into an apartment.

Accessory Apartment Addition. Building an addition on a house to create a separate apartment

Detached Accessory Dwelling Unit. Building a new free-standing structure or adding a living unit over a new or existing garage.

These versatile units can be a great fit for multi-generational, non-traditional and blended families and used as:

  • Living space for an elderly parent
  • Living space for adult children
  • Living quarters for a nanny or caregiver
  • Guest quarters
  • Long-term rental apartment
  • Short-term rental of bedroom or apartment (Airbnb)
  • Owners can move into this space and rent out the main house

As the units increase the supply of reasonably-priced housing, local jurisdictions have recently changed or are reviewing residential zoning laws to allow for an ADU as a “matter of right,” so it can be built with a permit and does not require a zoning variance. Creating this type of unit, especially a new structure on your property, is a substantial investment. However, it is worth considering due to the income that can be generated, as well as tax benefits.

Under the right conditions, they can provide additional income that can allow a homebuyer to borrow additional money.

Design Considerations

If it is attached, placement of separate entry/separation from main house

If detached, creating privacy from main house

Universal design/accessible features

Open floorplan

Above an existing garage

Parking spaces

Outdoor areas – how it ties to existing home’s yard and entertaining areas

Stop Leasing and Own Your Office

Chris Landis published this article as part of his membership in the Washington Business Journal’s Leadership Trust.

We are all so busy running our businesses that we often do not realize that there are other potential revenue-generating investments that align with our present and future business needs. If your firm has over 30 employees, I recommend you consider owning your offices as opposed to leasing. For many owners, the impediment to taking this step is that they are so busy running their business they don’t have the time or expertise to take on the search, purchase, design, permitting and construction of what could become their base of operations…

Click here to continue reading the article.

Investing in Property: Accessory Dwelling Units

Chris Landis published this article as part of his membership in the Washington Business Journal’s Leadership Trust.

As an architect with over 30 years of experience in the residential market of the D.C. metro area, I am often asked about improving a property as an investment opportunity. One increasingly popular option is to create an accessory dwelling unit (commonly known as an ADU).

An ADU is a secondary structure or apartment on a single-family lot. It has its own kitchen and bathroom and a separate entrance. The unit can be attached to the main house or detached, and it can be used as a living space for an elderly parent, a living space for adult children, living quarters for a nanny or caregiver, guest quarters, a long-term rental apartment, or a short-term rental bedroom or apartment (through a service like Airbnb). The owners could also move into this space and rent out their main space…

Click here to continue reading the article.

How to Run A Business Without a Business Degree (Four things they didn’t teach you in architecture school)

Chris Landis’ published this article as part of his membership in the Washington Business Journal’s Leadership Trust.

Architecture schools teach professional students about their craft, yet they fail to engage them with information about the business they will be entering. At the age of 35, I started my own design/build firm out of my attic with my then-29-year-old brother. Having moved to Washington, D.C., from New York City during the recession of the early 1990s, and with no previous professional residential remodeling experience, my first few years in business were not easy — but I loved it.

With a certificate for a master’s degree in architecture framed and hanging on my attic wall, I spent days on job sites doing handyman work and plastering the town with printed advertisements, and nights poring over paperwork. It was a full year before I was able to sell design work to a residential client. My wife had the steady job in our family, paying the monthly mortgage on the house we had just bought, while I was working day and night to get our business off the ground.

Architecture school did not prepare me for any of this…

Click here to continue reading the article.