Middle Housing Is Slowly Reshaping Bend’s Neighborhoods

Middle Housing Is Slowly Reshaping Bend's Neighborhoods — photo by Peter Robbins on Unsplash

Four years after Oregon’s House Bill 2001 took effect in Bend, middle housing is no longer a theoretical policy discussion. It’s visible on the ground. Per Bend Bulletin reporting from December 2025, middle housing is “slowly densifying” Bend neighborhoods, with duplexes, townhomes, and cottage developments appearing on lots that previously held single-family homes. The pace is gradual rather than dramatic, and the reality on the ground is more nuanced than either the supporters or critics of HB 2001 predicted.

What Is Actually Being Built

The most common middle housing type appearing in Bend is the duplex. This makes economic sense: a duplex is the simplest step up from a single-family home in terms of design complexity, construction cost, and financing availability. A builder can construct two units on a single lot, spreading land costs across two households and creating two income-generating units where one existed before.

Townhomes are the second most common type, particularly on larger lots and in areas closer to commercial corridors. Townhouse developments of four to eight units are appearing along arterial streets and on corner lots where access and visibility make them practical.

Cottage clusters, the most community-oriented of the middle housing types, remain rare. The shared common area requirements and the design complexity of arranging multiple small detached structures on a single lot create challenges that duplexes and townhomes don’t have. A few cottage cluster projects have been proposed or permitted, but they haven’t yet become a significant part of the development landscape.

Code Updates Making It Easier

Recent code updates in 2024 and 2025 have further smoothed the path for middle housing development. One of the most significant changes is eliminating the requirement to apply for building permits before middle housing land divisions. Previously, a property owner who wanted to divide their lot for townhome development needed to secure building permits first, creating a chicken-and-egg problem. The updated process allows land divisions to proceed on their own merits, with building permits handled separately.

This procedural change matters more than it might seem. Land division is a prerequisite for selling individual townhome or cottage cluster units. By decoupling it from the building permit process, the city has removed a timing bottleneck that was discouraging some middle housing projects.

What Neighbors Are Actually Seeing

The experience of living next to new middle housing varies considerably depending on the specific project and its context. Here is what we’re hearing from homeowners in Bend neighborhoods where middle housing has appeared:

Construction disruption is temporary but real. Building two or more units on a lot that previously had one involves significant construction activity. Noise, dust, construction vehicles, and temporary parking disruption are common complaints during the building phase. This is standard for any construction project, but it’s new for neighborhoods that haven’t seen much development activity in years.

Density increases are modest. A duplex on a formerly single-family lot adds one household. A fourplex adds three. In most cases, the density increase on any single lot is noticeable but not transformative. The cumulative effect of multiple middle housing projects across a neighborhood is more significant, but this accumulation is happening slowly.

Design quality varies. Some middle housing projects are well-designed, with thoughtful architecture, landscaping, and site planning that integrates with the existing neighborhood. Others are utilitarian, prioritizing unit count over design quality. The latter tend to generate more neighborhood opposition, and understandably so.

Parking concerns are common but not always realized. The reduced parking requirements for middle housing are a frequent worry for neighbors. In practice, the parking impact depends on the specific project and location. Projects near commercial areas, bike routes, and transit see less parking impact. Projects in car-dependent areas further from services can strain on-street parking.

How Values Are Affected

The property value question is the one homeowners care about most, and the honest answer is that it’s complicated. Research from cities that have allowed middle housing for longer than Bend shows several patterns:

Lot values often increase. If your lot can support a duplex or fourplex, it’s potentially worth more to a developer than as a single-family lot. This is particularly true for larger lots, corner lots, and lots in areas with strong rental demand.

Adjacent home values are generally unaffected by well-designed middle housing. Studies consistently show that the quality and maintenance of development matters far more than the density. A well-maintained duplex doesn’t reduce the value of neighboring single-family homes. A poorly maintained property of any type can.

Neighborhood character shifts gradually. Over years and decades, as more middle housing fills in, neighborhood character evolves. Streets become somewhat denser, parking patterns change, and the mix of residents shifts toward more renters and smaller households. Whether you view this as positive or negative depends on your perspective, but it’s a real change that homeowners should acknowledge.

What the Trend Means Going Forward

Middle housing production in Bend will likely accelerate in the coming years for several reasons:

  • The code updates making land divisions easier will encourage more projects
  • Rising land costs within the Urban Growth Boundary make density more economically attractive
  • The city’s 20-year planning process will likely identify middle housing as a key strategy for accommodating growth
  • Builder familiarity with middle housing products is increasing, reducing the learning curve and risk premium

The long-term trajectory points toward a Bend that looks more like other mature Western cities: a mix of single-family homes, townhomes, duplexes, small apartment buildings, and mixed-use developments, rather than the predominantly single-family landscape of the past.

What You Can Do

If middle housing development is proposed in your neighborhood, participate in the process. Review the plans, attend any public comment opportunities, and communicate your concerns constructively. If you’re considering selling your property to a builder, understand the development potential of your lot before negotiating. If you’re looking to buy, middle housing units can offer the benefits of homeownership, individual entrance, some outdoor space, in-unit laundry, at price points below detached single-family homes.

For current market data on all housing types in Central Oregon, visit our housing market section. Our team can help you understand how middle housing trends affect your specific situation, whether you’re buying, selling, or simply wanting to know what’s coming to your neighborhood.