Under Phoenix’s Housing Phoenix Plan, the city has fast-tracked affordable housing and preservation efforts, having delivered or preserved more than 50,000 units—5,000 ahead of schedule. The current pipeline includes many “fully affordable” developments (not just mixed income). This scale matters for social stability, workforce housing, and mitigating extreme rent inflation. From a wealth management lens, affordable housing is lower yield but lower volatility. In the regulatory sphere, city incentives, density bonuses, or fee waivers often undergird such projects. In smart-city frameworks, affordability is integral to inclusive growth.

A September 2025 report details impact-fee fund balances and system-area consolidations under the updated rate study, including consolidating multiple water and wastewater service areas; the Utility Billing page confirms the active study guiding council on future rates and fees. Wealth planning for infill and hillside product should include potential fee adjustments. Taxes and fees fund water resiliency, slope stability and fire-wise infrastructure. Regulation is driven by the Land Development Code and P&Z hearings. Value stability benefits from infrastructure investment pacing. Smart-city elements include GIS service-area mapping and data-driven fee models.
The city’s Downtown Campus Reinvestment initiative outlines renovations to City Hall, the parking garage, council chambers and adjacent facilities, signaling long-life-cycle upgrades to public spaces that support surrounding private investment and event activity; council meetings and planning hearings through mid-2025 also tracked zoning text amendment considerations, underscoring an active policy pipeline. Wealth and family office strategies view civic improvements as tailwinds for nearby assets. Tax capacity benefits from rising property and sales activity in revitalized cores. The regulatory context coordinates capital planning with zoning updates. Value durability ties to institutional anchors and placemaking. Smart-city integration spans safety, traffic and digital public-service access.
In February 2025, planners tabled the Anthem East preliminary plat in Florence for additional revisions, with developers indicating a shift from 3,290 to ~3,137 lots at ~3.37 units/acre on ~983 acres near Hunt Highway and Felix Road; the action illustrates current scrutiny on circulation, infrastructure, and density balance at the master-planned community’s edge. For wealth holders, timeline extensions alter absorption and carry-cost assumptions. Tax revenue timing similarly shifts with delivery cadence. Regulatory oversight remains focused on phasing, traffic, drainage and General Plan alignment. Value stability remains supported by established amenities in the core while new phases are sequenced. Smart-growth elements involve coordinated arterials, utilities and open-space networks.



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Public Safety as an Asset Class: The New Scottsdale AdvantageIn today’s Smart City economy, safety isn’t simply about peace of mind—it’s becoming a measurable, marketable asset class. Scottsdale is proving that public safety can be engineered into the fabric of
How To Passively Grow Equity With A New-Build Home—Without Sacrificing Lifestyle Or Peace Of MindIn today’s housing market, timing and strategy often feel like everything. With construction cranes rising across places like North Scottsdale, Queen Creek, Goodyear, and Surprise, many buyers are Nice to meet you! I’m Katrina Golikova, and I believe you landed here for a reason.
I help my clients to reach their real estate goals through thriving creative solutions and love to share my knowledge.

