My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
5.0. 6.0. 7.0. HRSR 02-23-1998
ElkRiver
>
City Government
>
Boards and Commissions
>
Housing & Redevelopment Authority
>
HRA Packets
>
1993-1999
>
1998
>
02-23-1998
>
5.0. 6.0. 7.0. HRSR 02-23-1998
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
12/1/2015 1:24:47 PM
Creation date
12/1/2015 10:10:09 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Government
type
HRSR
date
2/23/1998
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
112
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Encouraging multi-level buildings, preventing over-building of parking areas, <br /> and mixing uses (horizontally and vertically) will perpetuate the sense that this <br /> is the center of Monticello. Downtowns have a feeling of enclosure created by <br /> • buildings and place buildings as the focus of development. Downtowns — <br /> places 'of the highest degree of mixed use — also seem to have a sense that <br /> even conflicting uses find a way to work together. Mixing uses also keeps <br /> activity in a downtown during more of the day, allowing for a safer environ- <br /> ment by having more"eyes on the street." <br /> People know how to navigate streets that meet at right angles at regular inter- <br /> vals; they quickly become disoriented in environments with streets that wind <br /> a ,y r?fit*wr • - - ' <br /> '�xr,' s' � <br /> • <br /> St-,- <br /> ;t` f• t" y--_ - R \ <br /> ?4 � <br /> apt .r i • <br /> -,`‘W/4741 .404 <br /> • v� t-11:01 '1 <br /> � '� 4 df.4s '`* • .1.• i� � ''•4r` =;�y �" '` <br /> s :f.01 t'.: y�� / ¢y, <br /> ''t.X ; :_ `47-. .iia.' iJ ' Vii? *; 44 � ,t: a <br /> A y <br /> rib y � '4,s -t y • 7�y ill, . <br /> • <br /> • • � • • 'moi}4'- 4ASio <br /> A downtown that Is based on the original gri oMonticello•evelopmentlprovides coherency for the down.wn area ana a <br /> way for people to easily find their way. <br /> • <br /> • between buildings, where there is no terminal view and their orientation to the <br /> sun changes constantly. The patterns of the streets — maintaining a strong <br /> consistent grid—fulfills the notion of a legible downtown in Monticello. This <br /> pattern, as it already exists, should be easy to maintain. Any proposal to <br /> change the grid should be viewed with a great amount of skepticism. <br /> Downtown Monticello should be a place where the community gathers and <br /> that invites visitors. The public spaces (especially the streets of downtown) <br /> and the relationship of buildings to these spaces are vital — they need to be <br /> filled with the character of the community. Although the plan promotes <br /> prominent buildings, it will be people that are the highlight of Monticello's <br /> downtown. When the character of streets merges with the character of build- <br /> ings, and people fill the spaces of downtown with their activity, the place <br /> comes alive and becomes memorable. <br /> In this plan, patterns of land use and design features come together to form the Broad Patterns and Design Direction <br /> basis for the downtown —building on the character that exists here as well as <br /> maintaining a focus on Monticello's small town qualities. The use of land in <br /> the downtown and riverfront area is critical to many of the principles that <br /> guide the plan, and will become important in defining a"look" for the area that <br /> continues to identify it as downtown Monticello. The elements of the down- <br /> • town and riverfront—the buildings, streets, gathering spaces—all need to be < r <br /> A New Bridge i <br /> RevltalIzing Monticello's Downtown and Rlverfront- - <br /> Page 3:11 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.