Anne Krieg, AICP
Bridgton Director of
Planning, Economic &
Community
Development
Comprehensive Planning
We need a plan from which to deviate
Golden Gate Park
• Olmsted was there first
• Daniel Burnham weighed in
• William Hammond Hall surveyor completed
Charles Burnham Chicago Plan
The Plan focused on six major physical elements:
1. improving the lakefront
2. developing a highway system
3. improving the freight and passenger railway
systems
4. acquisition of an outer park system
5. arranging systematic streets; and
6. creation of a civic center of cultural institutions
and government.
Regional Plan of NY
You may draw all
the lines you
please between
counties and
states, a city is a
growth responding
to forces not at all
political (Elihu
Root, Committee
member)
Cincinnati Plan
No plan on
paper is
fully
effective
until it
becomes a
Citizens’
Plan.
Tennessee
Valley
Authority
It is time to extend planning to a wider field, in this instance
comprehending in one great project many states directly
concerned with the basin of one of our greatest rivers
Stanford
Industrial
Park
…a serious young engineer had to
go back east to put spit and polish
on his education. (Frederick Terman)
Reston Virginia
Oregon Statewide Land Use Law
sagebrush subdivisions, coastal
condomania, and the ravenous
rampages of suburbia
(Governor Tom McCall)
Comprehensive
Planning in Maine
• 1987
• State agency review
• State goals
• Regional review
Requirements• Inventory & Analysis
• Policy Development
Implementation
Strategy
Regional
Coordination
Inventory
• Economic & demographics
• Water resources
• Critical natural resources
• Forestry & agriculture
• Recreation & parks
• Transportation
• Housing
• Historical resources
• Land use
• Capital facilities & town services
Policy Development
• Growth areas
• Discourage incompatible development
• Transitional areas
• Capital Investment Plan
• Protection of water bodies, natural resources and forestry & agriculture
• Affordable housing
• Outdoor recreation
Bridgton’s Plan
• Fall 2014 schedule
• Public Process
• History of Committee
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now
Comprehensive Plans - then and now

Comprehensive Plans - then and now

  • 1.
    Anne Krieg, AICP BridgtonDirector of Planning, Economic & Community Development
  • 2.
    Comprehensive Planning We needa plan from which to deviate
  • 3.
    Golden Gate Park •Olmsted was there first • Daniel Burnham weighed in • William Hammond Hall surveyor completed
  • 4.
    Charles Burnham ChicagoPlan The Plan focused on six major physical elements: 1. improving the lakefront 2. developing a highway system 3. improving the freight and passenger railway systems 4. acquisition of an outer park system 5. arranging systematic streets; and 6. creation of a civic center of cultural institutions and government.
  • 5.
    Regional Plan ofNY You may draw all the lines you please between counties and states, a city is a growth responding to forces not at all political (Elihu Root, Committee member)
  • 6.
    Cincinnati Plan No planon paper is fully effective until it becomes a Citizens’ Plan.
  • 7.
    Tennessee Valley Authority It is timeto extend planning to a wider field, in this instance comprehending in one great project many states directly concerned with the basin of one of our greatest rivers
  • 9.
    Stanford Industrial Park …a serious youngengineer had to go back east to put spit and polish on his education. (Frederick Terman)
  • 11.
  • 13.
    Oregon Statewide LandUse Law sagebrush subdivisions, coastal condomania, and the ravenous rampages of suburbia (Governor Tom McCall)
  • 14.
    Comprehensive Planning in Maine •1987 • State agency review • State goals • Regional review
  • 15.
    Requirements• Inventory &Analysis • Policy Development Implementation Strategy Regional Coordination
  • 16.
    Inventory • Economic &demographics • Water resources • Critical natural resources • Forestry & agriculture • Recreation & parks • Transportation • Housing • Historical resources • Land use • Capital facilities & town services
  • 17.
    Policy Development • Growthareas • Discourage incompatible development • Transitional areas • Capital Investment Plan • Protection of water bodies, natural resources and forestry & agriculture • Affordable housing • Outdoor recreation
  • 18.
    Bridgton’s Plan • Fall2014 schedule • Public Process • History of Committee