Friday, October 19, 2007

Zoning Ideas from Elsewhere



Zoning and Planning Ideas From Elsewhere

Miami – From sprawlage to village In Miami, a three-year project will replace the city's old, sprawl-generating code with a new model, called "Miami 21." The buzzword for the new code is "form-based." It aims to create compact, traditional neighborhoods with building forms that provide a coherent public realm. Famed New Urbanist architect Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, a Main Line native, argues that form-based zoning can retrofit Miami with the atmosphere of an urban village. http://www.miami21.org

Denver - Props for process Already renowned for its redeveloped LoDo (lower downtown) warehouse district, Denver launched a three-step regional planning campaign that is a model for citizen engagement. It started with Plan 2000, shaped by 11 citizen task forces. Next came "Blueprint Denver," a land-use and transportation plan. These set up step three, the zoning-code revision that is happening now. Throughout, Denver planners used listening sessions, open houses and a Web site to keep the public on board. http://www.denvergov. org/ZoningSimplification/HomePage/tabid/396395/Default.aspx

Boston - A custom-made city

Rather than allow politicians

to tweak neighborhood zoning at will, Boston invites neighborhoods to customize their own zoning district to match neighborhood goals. Intense civic involvement means this takes four years per neighborhood, with regular meetings of a citizen advisory committee guided

by planners from the Boston Redevelopment Authority. They've been at it since 1989, with immense public support. http://cityofboston.gov/bra/zoning/zoning.asp.

If these large metropolitan areas realize that they have zoning problems, why can the BOCC not be reviewing our zone mess? Where is our LEADERSHIP ?

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