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Placemaking Through Zoning
For
many of us, zoning means protecting the quality of life for
residents and minimizing the adverse impacts of one property
upon another. The original intent of zoning was, in part to
do just that. Times have changed since zoning was first introduced
in the early years of the 20th Century. Yet we seem to be
stuck focusing on the techniques of zoning, rather than working
to achieve better ends through development regulations.
Lately, the vogue has been to focus on the form-giving elements
of zoning. But not everyone finds this approach favorable.
Some planners are cautious about form-based zoning because
they see it as too doctrinaire, too formulaic, too complex,
or too dependent upon the designers interpretation of
generally stated values. Other planners are contemptuous of
what is often called Euclidian zoning because it has resulted
in land use separation that, in hindsight, they now see as
undesirable.
Looking Beyond Zonings Limitations
There
is a move toward refocusing zoning as a community response
to the broader planning vision. Zoning has evolved to include
a mix of use-based, performance and form-based zoning in a
manner that directly links land use, urban design and quality
of life policies. But, why are we doing this, and where are
we headed?
Underlying such thinking is the goal of building desirable
and sustainable places where people find comfort in the settings
we create and find those settings efficient to build, manage,
and maintain. A sense of place is more
than the form of the place; it is the function and level of
activity that occurs there. Whether intended or not, the act
of zoning can help to create or destroy the physical aspects
of ones sense of place, because it is through zoning
that a city regulates the way these placemaking elements come
together. Consider the types of places found in any town:
a town center, a neighborhood, a commercial highway, an industrial
park. Thoughtful use of zoning can help to establish the character
of each of these areas to reflect the scale of development,
pattern of property ownership, function and modes of travel.
But to do that, one must understand the type of environment
to be created.
Placemaking reinforces those aspects of a neighborhood or
district that make it distinctive and functionally unique.
Thus, placemaking must incorporate the identity of an area,
its cultural values, uses, levels of activities and physical
scale and forms, into the pattern of development within that
area.
Zoning Is Only As Good As The Quality Of The Vision
We should not lose sight of the fact that zoning is a purpose
driven activity. Zoning as placemaking cannot be completed
in a vacuum. Rather, it must be preceded by clear policy directions
established by a community plan that is tempered by a clear
understanding of the community values and development realities
that affect the kind of places to be created. There are three
sustainability principles which are critical to the development
of place-based zoning in a community.
- To support social systems within the community
which embrace shared values by providing a transparent and
equitable process of planning and change, maximizing social
interaction within the cultural context, and protecting
and enhancing community quality of life.
- To support economic systems within the community
which provide resilience by integrating changing market
needs into flexible development forms, providing a diversity
of economic opportunities consistent with the market, and
meeting local needs by using local resources efficiently.
- To support environmental systems which support
green infrastructure by minimizing its impact on current
and future environmental resources, minimizing land and
transportation requirements, and maximizing the integration
of the underlying ecology.
All of these factors must inform the zoning process. A proper
combination results in a desirable, functional and comfortable
environment for work, home or play. The key is that a citys
development policy must be clear enough to provide a basis
for such zoning. In essence, the identification of the desired
place characteristics should emanate from the communitys
planning policies and related strategies.
Work
now in progress in New Orleans illustrates this relationship.
At present, the City is preparing a new Master Plan intended
to inform the structure of a new zoning ordinance. We believe
that the hinge between these two elements is defining the
communitys neighborhoods and districts in terms of their
place-making characteristics. The degree to which the plan
identifies different characteristics of the residential neighborhoods
and commercial districts will provide the basis for the use,
form and performance criteria used to implement the character
of each district. In this manner, zoning serves to implement
a broad base of plan and design policies. It is more than
creating regulations to limit adverse impacts; it is creating
regulations to attain a desired pattern of development, which
will help to provide the quality of life desired by the communitys
residents and businesses.
If we approach zoning from this broader viewpoint we no longer
have to be troubled as to the specific approach we are taking.
Rather, we can focus our efforts on identifying the types
of places we want to create and determine how our zoning regulations
can achieve the desired result. It may not be easy, since
it requires careful understanding of community values, strong
insights into the elements that underlie the desired community
places and the ability to clearly articulate the kind of development
we wish to achieve in various sectors of our communities.
But, if we approach zoning from this perspective, we will
have clear reasons for the regulations that we do craft. Only
then can we be confident that our zoning regulations, will
really help to achieve the goals of good city development.
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