Transcript Slide 1

Planning Tools and Techniques
for Urban Heritage
Jeffrey Soule, FAICP
American Planning Association
What is Urban Fabric and why do we care?
• Challenges of
Urbanization
• Cultural Identity vs.
globalization
• Scarce resources
• Impact on quality of life
• Civic view vs. Ego
• A philosophy as much
as technique
Ideological Battle
• Many architects
promote a “no
context” design
philosophy
• Koolhaas “Tabla
Rasa”
• Much of the world
views planning as
architecture
• World heritage is a
humanistic approach
Goals for Urban Planning:
• improve quality of life for the
most people.
• Fairly distribute positive and
negative aspects of
development.
• Cultural and historic
preservation
• Provide a predictable
process for decision making
informed by community
goals.
• Environmental conservation
• Involve a variety of people
Planning in America
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Comprehensive
Citizen participation
Many approaches
Long term perspective
Enforcement of Plans
Bottom up process
Planners represent public
Zoning: Legal Authority
and Background 1920s
• The Standard State Zoning
Enabling Act
• The Standard City Planning
Enabling Act
• State enabling legislation
• Prevent law suits due to
urbanization
• Planning act an
afterthought
Purpose of regulations
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Provide a process to
manage growth
Predictability over
time
Fairness
Carry out the vision
and general plan
Provide for appeals
Shared power
Encourage continuity
Zoning is only a piece of the process
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Incentives like
finance
Advice, education
and discussion
Subdivision
Design Guidelines
Historic Preservation
Districts/Overlays
Environmental
standards
Energy standards
City Design Process
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Reading the city
Reflect cultural layers
Human perspective
Citizen participation
Urban design is
between city plan and
architecture
• Manage at different
levels
Elements of Reading Places
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Customs
History
Climate
Visual elements
Scale
Architecture
Landscape
Importance of a strong
management framework
Infrastructure and Urban Fabric
Urban Intersections - Create Useful Parks and Spaces
Strict Geometry - Numerous Marketable Building Sites
• Establish the
infrastructure to direct
development
• Create neighborhoods
with distinct character
• Establish Design
guidelines based on
district characteristics
Design Guidelines
• Strengthen the city’s
character
• Helps implement the
civic vision and plan
• Encourage new
development that
adds value to the city
• Establishes a process
and criteria for review
• Essential for success
Design Guidelines preserve the city fabric
Annapolis
Washington DC
Design Guidelines
Elements for Success
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Clarity of purpose
Legal integrity
Link to City Plan
Third-party review
Weather criticism from architects
Celebrate results with the public
Specific design elements well defined
Mandeville Louisiana case study
Heritage area movement
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Natural, historic, and
cultural resources
Managed as an
assemblage through public
and private partnerships;
Reflects traditions,
customs, beliefs, and
folklife that contribute to
the story;
Provide outstanding
opportunities to conserve
natural, cultural, historic,
and /or scenic features;
Provide recreational and
educational opportunities.
Case Examples
Nanjing Men Xi Combining preservation
with development
•Inventory
•Establish form
characteristics
•Locate Key new
development in
cleared industrial
area
•Tie into overall
tourism strategy
Zhenjiang
• New Town Design
• Based on historic
urban landscape
• Incorporates modern
design within a local
framework
• Responds to both
human and
environmental needs
Other tools
• Historic Preservation
Tax Credits
• National Register of
Historic Places
• Historic Overlay
districts
20% rehabilitation tax credit
• The building must be used in a trade or
business or held for the production of
income.
• The rehabilitation must be substantial.
• The property must be placed in service
• The building must be a certified historic
structure when placed in service
• Qualified rehabilitation expenditures
include costs of the work on the historic
building, as well as architectural and
engineering fees, site survey fees, legal
expenses, development fees, and other
construction-related costs
• http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/tax/i
ndex.htm
Criteria for “Adverse Impact”
Under the National Register
• Physical destruction, damage
• Alteration not consistent with
the Secretary’s guidelines;
• Removal of the property from
its historic location;
• Change of the character of the
property’s use or of physical
features within the property's
setting that contribute to its
historic significance;
• Introduction of visual,
atmospheric or audible
elements that diminish the
integrity of the property's
historic features;
• Neglect of a property which
causes its deterioration.
Recommendations
• Incorporate but manage
iconoclastic ideologies
• Establish a communitybased plan
• Develop multiple
strategies based on
community defined
cultural values
• Link to economic
development
• Create a development
framework
• Implement design
guidelines
• Provide incentives for
residents and businesses
• Examine the lessons from
heritage areas
• Fix weak language in the
HUL guidelines