A Revitalization Plan for the City of Wilkes-Barre MeghanFlanaganPSU
Here is the Revitalization Plan that the City of Wilkes-Barre submitted on our November 6th deadline for the America's Best Communities competition! #ABC50
1215 Bidwell, Alan To Vancouver City Council, 10 Dec 2009WestEnd Prepare
Presentation of citizen Alan to Vancouver City Council in Public Hearing on rezoning of 1215 Bidwell Street (Maxine's Hideaway) in the West End to build a 20-storey tower.
A Revitalization Plan for the City of Wilkes-Barre MeghanFlanaganPSU
Here is the Revitalization Plan that the City of Wilkes-Barre submitted on our November 6th deadline for the America's Best Communities competition! #ABC50
1215 Bidwell, Alan To Vancouver City Council, 10 Dec 2009WestEnd Prepare
Presentation of citizen Alan to Vancouver City Council in Public Hearing on rezoning of 1215 Bidwell Street (Maxine's Hideaway) in the West End to build a 20-storey tower.
The Community Access Project, in partnership with the Boston Center for Independent Living, provides a letter to the MA Architectural Access Board and the Beacon Hill Architectural commission to encourage and support the development of accessible housing within the Beacon Hill Historic District. October 2011.
The Community Access Project, in partnership with the Boston Center for Independent Living, provides a letter to the MA Architectural Access Board and the Beacon Hill Architectural commission to encourage and support the development of accessible housing within the Beacon Hill Historic District. October 2011.
Road Traffic Noise Level Assessment at an Institutional AreaIJERA Editor
Unplanned and rapid urbanization, industrialization, increasing number of vehicles, poor traffic management, poor road condition etc. are the major causes of higher noise levels in most of the Indian cities. Prolonged exposure to higher noise levels can lead to irreversible Noise Induced Hearing Loss (NIHL). Noise-induced hearing loss is contributing one-third to the total persons suffering from hearing loss in every country in the world. The present study aims at measuring the noise levels in the university campus to analyze the current situation and suggesting noise control measures to be adopted in University campus and along MMA Jauhar Marg. The numbers of vehicles were counted during November 17-21, 2012 and noise levels were measured at various pre decided locations. The traffic load in horizon years 2013, 2017, 2022, 2027 and 2032 on the MMA Jauhar Marg Road is predicted on the basis of observed traffic data and expected annual growth rate as 8.0% for pre Metro and 3.5% for post Metro. The noise levels were measured using Larson Davis Model 831 Class 1 Sound Level Meter on both sides of road at foot paths along MMA Jauhar Marg and at various receptor locations inside the different buildings in the university campus. Model RLS-90 is used for prediction of noise levels. The prediction of metro noise is carried out using statistical calculations. The combined noise levels were compared with standard criteria for silent zone and found on higher side. Installation of environment noise barrier is suggested as one of the noise control measure to be adopted along MMA Jauhar Marg and along metro viaduct to save students and staff from exposure of higher noise levels.
IJRET : International Journal of Research in Engineering and Technology is an international peer reviewed, online journal published by eSAT Publishing House for the enhancement of research in various disciplines of Engineering and Technology. The aim and scope of the journal is to provide an academic medium and an important reference for the advancement and dissemination of research results that support high-level learning, teaching and research in the fields of Engineering and Technology. We bring together Scientists, Academician, Field Engineers, Scholars and Students of related fields of Engineering and Technology.
Pollution Due To Noise from Selected PlacesIOSR Journals
Noise pollution degrades environment and also causes health hazard to human beings. In urban areas major sources of noise pollution are traffic and construction activities. Available guide lines for noise pollution have been reviewed in the paper. Measurement of noise levels at selected locations reported in the paper, for example, railway stations, use of machinery at construction sites, etc., was made and compared with the guide line values. It has been observed that the noise level at all locations exceeds the value prescribed by the competent authorities. At the pedestrian locations the noise level is 60 dB to 110 dB. At the railway crossing the noise level is 45 dB to 110 dB. The above inference shows that the noise pollution is paramount at all sources. Due to the various adverse impacts of noise on humans and environment, noise should be controlled. The conclusion drawn from this study is that the technique or the combination of techniques to be employed for noise control depends upon the extent of the noise reduction required, nature of the equipment used and the economy aspects of the available techniques
9/8 THUR 12:15 | Keynote Ellen Dunham-JonesAPA Florida
In line with the conference theme, “What Will We Do Now?”,Ellen Dunham-Jones will open the conference with a discussion on how to transform the sprawl of suburbia into a more resilient and more urban future. Ms. Dunham-Jones co-authored
the book, “Retrofitting Suburbia”, which catalogs a full range of strategies from full-scale town center redevelopment to transformations of big box sites into churches, call centers, and public libraries to incremental strategies such as improving accessibility, so residents can age in place. Ms. Dunham-Jones is an award-winning architect, professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology and a leading authority on suburban redevelopment. She teaches and researches contemporary architectural urban design studios and theory. Her insights and their potential
for application in Florida should be of particular interest as communities come to terms with sprawling development patterns in the face of fewer available resources needed to serve them.
An Overview of the City Beautiful Movement - An architectural manifestation of the social response to failing urban life.
Contains details regarding the origin, key characteristics, architects and major cities involved, along with the following case studies :
- Mcmillan Plan
- Plan of Chicago and
- City of Minneapolis.
Urban Amenities Spurring New Development in City CentersJLL
JLL’s Development and Asset Strategy team provides insights into how cities efforts to create urban amenities are resulting in new development opportunities for investors.
Our Spring 2015 edition featuring more on the fate of 955 Hillside grounds, transforming the grounds at Ecole Quadra School, meet creative neighbour, musician Wynn Gogol and much more!
You can see more photos of 955 Hillside Ave. as a school field here: http://www.slideshare.net/HillsideQuadraCommunityNews/955-hillside-ave-45538236
1. T HE MAGAZINE OF THE AMER ICAN PLANNING ASSOCIATION OCTOBER 2011
2. The
Upsizing
The signature Wishbone Bridge is one of several major projects bringing TOO and greater density to suburban White Flint.
eff Peterson, a U.S. Navy nurse, phoned his wife Kristine to describe the apartment he'd
found for them and their four-year-old son, Jack, in a spot just north ofWashington, D .C.
They h ad lived for several years on the U.S. naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where
frills were rare. So wh en he explained to her that the new apartment had a large, fancy su-
permarket on the ground floor, she nearly cried.
Itwas"likeseeingthegatesofheaven," form an unsightly quilt of surface park- cut automobile trips and build a critical
says Kristine Peterson, who moved with ing, chaotic highways, and unattractive mass of residents to support a more urban
her family to White Flint, Maryland, an strip malls in an area of about 430 acres, center, they say.
unincorporated area of about 10 square about half the size of New York's Central For a generation, White Flint has
miles in Montgomery County. Park. Zoning changes will promote a six- been mostly known for two things: its
Apartment towers with green roofs fold increase in the number of housing station on the Washington Metro, about
and groce1y stores with sushi bars are units from 2,300 to 14,400, and double 12 miles &om downtown D.C., and the
just a part of the formula to transform a nonresidential building from six million White Flint Mall. 'Rvo of the mall's an-
quintessential 1960s suburb into a verti- to 13 million square feet. chors, Bloomingdale:S and Lord & Tay-
cal, vibrant, urban village. The White Planners want to flip the property mix lor, hint at the shopping center's tony ap-
Flint Sector Plan, adopted by the county in the area &om 70 percent nonresiden- peal when it opened in 1977, but it's been
council in March 2010, seeks to trans- tial to 60 percent residential, which wiU a while since anyone associated "lavish"
American Planning Association I 39
3. with the mall or its setting on Maryland
Route 355.
That road begins as Wisconsin Avenue
Rockville Pike will be
in the District of Columbia and ends 40
transformed from an eight-lane
miles north in e>..'Urban Frederick, Mary- highway into a boulevard with
land. But through White Flint it is known dedicated rapid bus lanes and
as Rockville Pike, an unappealing eight- wide, tree-lined sidewalks. The
lane artery that carries 60,000 vehicles a 24-story residential tower at
North Bethesda Market (below),
day. Rollin Stanley, AICP, the Montgomery a mixed use development
County planning director, says the road anchored by Whole Foods
often reminds him of the scene in the cult Market, is the tallest building in
movie Office Space, where a pedestrian Montgomery County.
with a walker gets where he's going faster
than the motorists stuck in traffic.
Now and next
White Flint's future was a planning topic
back when the capital's Metro rail system
was being hnilt in the mid-1970s, but
the subject took on greater urgency over
the past decade as congestion worsened
along Rockville Pike. County officials,
property owners, and community activ-
ists have spent the past five years debat-
ing a dramatic overhaul. The full vision is
a decade or two away, but parts of it are
now taking shape.
Driving south on Rockville Pike, the
White Flint area rises up, Emerald City-
like, from a land of strip shopping centers
and parking lots. Soaring cranes pl·ep:u·e
a major addition to the existing offices of
the U.S. Nudear Regulat01y Commis-
sion beside the glass-roofed modern pa-
goda of the White Flint Metro stop. Half
of the NRC employees already use mass
transit, making it one of the most transit- lowed to trim its costs by providing about Foods Market linked to an apanment
oriented of federal agencies. According one-third less parking than it normally rower that at 24 stories is the tallest build-
to the Washington Metropolitan Area would. The county reduced parking ing in the county. Penthouse vistas sweep
Transit Authority, the White Flint stop minimums in the area to entice develop- from a view of the Washington Monu-
could attract 8,000 daily users when all ment proposals designed to capitalize on ment- 12 miles south- to distant, purple
the redevelopment is complete-up fwm White Flint's proximity to the Washing- Sugarloaf Mountain in the Appalachian
4,200 now. ton Metro. foothills a couple of dozen miles north.
Nearby, the project with the Harris "This was a nowheresville. There was As for the nearby White Flint Mall, the
Teeter grocery on the ground floor- and no sense of place," says Michael Smith, plan prescribes additional buildings on
hundreds of sedum plants arrayed in a a vice president of LCOR, which leased the property nearest the pike with greater
pinwheel on its green roof- is slated to 97 percent of the first apartment tower density and scale than the shopping mall.
include four towers encircling a commu- not long after opening it in 2008. "vVe "This is big anywhere, but to plan this
nity green. The build out calls for nearly don't want to be known as White F lint. in the middle of an established suburban
1,300 apartments, 1.4 million square feet It references a mall. It doesn't reference a environment, it's one of the most trans-
of commercial space, and outdoor dining neighborhood environment. We have led formative developments in a suburb in
around a "preserve" of old-growth trees a revolution out here in North Bethes- America," says Stanley, who arrived from
that were saved from a golf driving range da." Some of those involved have tried St. Louis three years ago to head Mont-
previously on the site-quite unlike the to make the nickname "NoBe" stick- for gomety's planning department. Rockville
current "outdoors" experience along the North Bethesda-hoping to cultivate a Pike is to be rebuilt as a grand boulevard
congested pike. SoHovibe. with dedicated bus rapid transit lanes
The developer LCOR Inc., like other Just across Rockville Pike, construc- down the middle and landscaped bike
builders in the sector plan area, was al- tion crews are busily completing a Whole paths, although that vision could take de-
40 Planning October 2011
4. Critics railed against greater traffic on
Rockville Pike and contended d1at the
plan was a ruse to pack in more develop-
ment. But suppor t grew among residents
who saw the concept as a means toward a
more modern, SlSt;tinable, and green sub-
urb. A blog ca!Jed Friends of White Flint
attt·acted many followers w:ith news such
as a traffic study that estimated an aver-
age trip along the Pike might increase by
all of 32 seconds by tbe time the build out
is complete.
''I don't think anyone is looking at this
cades to complete. All existing commer- changing areas in all commercial build- as a get-rich-quick scheme," says Dan
cial property owners are starting to con- ings. Hoffman, a White Flint home owner
tribute nearly 80 percent of the cost of The verticaJization of White Flint- who occasionally bikes to !his job at the
the infrastructure improvements through "strategic infill," Stanley calls it- will NRC. "The term 'smart growth' is a bit
a special tax. Existing multifamily, town help Montgomery County to maintain overused, but if they want to grow in a
houses, and a religious institution are its low-density land use in other spots. It smart manner they're going to have to
excluded, says Nkosi Yearwood of the will also provide m01·e affordable housing put the density around Metro stations
county's planning department. in one of the top 10 richest counties in and around transit hubs. White Flint is
The commercial real estate owners America, where the median household a perfect example of where we can grow
and county officials obviously see a large income exceeds $93,000. In the Harris but not increase congestion and infra-
economic benefit, too: The sector plan is Teeter tower, about 35 of the 312 units strucntre to the point where it's unsus-
expected to generate an additional $7 bil- are leased below market, in line witb the tainable."
lion in revenue for the county over the county's affordable housing law-renting A mix of interest groups not normally
40-year life of the plan. It is the largest for between $1,000 and $1,400 a month keen on major development-senior
redevelopment plan in the county, Stan- compared to regular priced rents from citizens, environmentalists, social equity
ley says, adding that the financing and $1,400 to $2,600. advocates-saw the benefits of a more
staging plans for White Flint's intended "For every doctor working at Sub- walkable, cyclable, affordable White
transformation are much more exhaustive urban Hospital," says Stanley, referring Flint. "The Sierra Club, Chesapeake Bay
than for the more massive redevelopment to a medical center in nearby Bethesda, Foundation, 1,000 Friends of Maryland
being planned for larger Tysons Corner, "tbere are three people making less tban got behind this project," says Smith, the
Virginia, some 15 miles to the southwest. $50,000 a year who come from 140 coun- LCOR executive. "We changed the para-
tries and speak 100 languages. Where are dig:tn. We flipped the switch." Goldman
Strategic lnfill they going to live? How are they going to of Federal Realty says he was astounded
The remaking ofvVhite Flint, as Stanley get to work? This is what we need to be to 'vimess competitors in commercial
and others tell it, was only in part about discussing." real estate openly discuss market trends
retrofitting a suburb. There are plenty and rent projections, cards they normally
of worse-off suburbs in America or even Making It work hold tight to their vests. To him, it was
suburban Washington. Its strip centers Montgomery County officials were de- a sign of their collective commitment to
are largely full and its access to the Wash- liberate in their approach to White Flint. propelling change.
ington Metro is priceless. Even Mid-Pike They raised the fee structure for appli- "This is replicable around the country
Plaza, a 1960s strip center that will be cations to ensure credible proposals. De- where you've got a road that's not func-
replaced with a mixed use neighborhood, velopers must provide something from a tioning, where you have a sea of parking,
could have chugged along profitably in menu of amenities, from public art and where most retail shopping centers have
its current fotm, says Evan Goldman, vice benches to a civic green, in exchange for aged 20 or 30 years, be it the hodge-
president of development for the center's increased density. But what may have podge up and down Routes 4 and 17 in
owner, Federal Realty InvesunentTrust. been most important, Stanley says, were Paramus, New Jersey, or around Chicago
Next year the real estate i~nvestment developers and community activists see- or California," he says. "We had to fig-
trust plans to begin the first phase of re- ing mutual benefit and joining to sell the ure out how to make Swiss cheese into
development at Mid-Pike, a project that plan. They used a mix of new media and something."
could ultimately result in 13 buildings old-fashioned shoe leather to reach out
• Andrew Ratner is the director of communications
totaling three million square feet of re- to a smart and politically savvy commu- and education in the Maryland Department of
tail, residential, office, and hotel space. nity where nearly one-third of all adults Planning.
The completed redevelopment is envi- hold postgraduate degrees. "We couldn't
sioned to include a nine-block street grid, have done it all alone or we'd have just
hundreds of bike racks and showers, and looked like salesmen," Stanley notes.
American Planning Association 41