A private house with red roof

Israeli cities and local authorities have seen low-rise housing construction on a large scale.

house chart 521 (photo credit: Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies)
house chart 521
(photo credit: Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies)
One might assume that smaller, one- or two-story buildings would characterize rural localities. Low-density housing is less suited to urban localities, particularly in light of the depletion of land available for development and the National Master Plan No. 35 for land development that specifies minimal housing density standards.
The hard, data, however, clearly indicate that Israeli cities and local authorities have seen low-rise housing construction on a large scale. During 2009 and 2010, some 88 percent of buildings completed in urban localities (compared with 80% in cities) had one to two stories (The data pertains to new buildings and does not include new units added to standing buildings). The picture is even starker when examining the data for all new construction completed during those two years, including rural areas: 93% of all new buildings that accounted for 48% of all new residential units were one- to two-story buildings.
This is not a new trend. The numbers for the past decade demonstrate that a similar percentage of new construction in urban localities (87%), as well as throughout the country (91%), was of one- to two-story buildings.
A possible explanation for this reality may be the efforts of localities to attract wealthier families who generally seek singlehome residences. Yet this trend contradicts the declared national planning policy, which seeks to increase housing density.
Jerusalem, and its neighboring localities to an even greater degree, have an unusually large number of high-rises. Of all the cities in Israel that saw the completion of more than 20 new buildings between 2009 and 2010, most localities in the Jerusalem region had the lowest percentages of low-rise construction.
Localities in which low-rise buildings accounted for less than 50% of new construction include Ma’aleh Adumim (9%), Givat Ze’ev (34%), Modi’in-Maccabim-Reut (38%), Beit Shemesh (41%), Betar Illit (42%) and Jerusalem (49%). The only other cities where low-rise buildings accounted for less than 50% of new construction were Elad, Eilat and Givatayim.
By way of comparison, low-risers accounted for 61% of new construction in Haifa, 63% in Tel Aviv and 92% in Rishon Lezion and the overall average for all Israel urban localities was 88%. • www.jiis.org