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<br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />r~.:mn-Based Zoning <br /> <br />Page 2 of2 <br /> <br />$ Inventory the existing conditions of the place: It is important to have a deep <br />understanding of the existing conditions of the place, such as the street <br />types, and block and building types, to understand appropriate form and <br />massing of buildings. <br />$ Identify a set of organizing principles for the spatial structure: This can be <br />based on concepts such as: <br />'iI The neighborhood, district, and corridor; . <br />3 The. Transect, which defines intensity of activity based on the transect zone <br />that applies <br />3 Street-system-based regulatory plan <br /><<I Special purpose zones <br /><10 Define urban design standards: for example, establishing commercial street <br />design guidelines, with the goal of "sbaping the publiC space of the street." <br />& Define architectural standards; for example, building types and frontage <br />types <br /><10 Illustrate the standards, to make it easier for those who will be implementing <br />the code. <br /> <br />Bill Dennis of IViouie & Polyzoides discussed how New Urbanism is essentially the way <br />we used to develop towns, but conventional zoning has precluded that. He made the <br />point that all development pians should check to see how it works for a child, <br />because "a neighborhood is a child's world." <br /> <br />Geoffrey Ferrell of Geoffrey Ferrell Associates illustrated how the zoning and iand- <br />use maps do not translate Into what form appears on the ground. In addition, design <br />guidelines do not always capture the vitality of tile community that they are trying <br />to achieve. His observation is that the there are three elements to defining a place: <br />form, use/density,. and management. In many communities, use/denSity is the <br />primary emphasis when defining a place, followed by management, with farm <br />treated very lightly. The form-based code approach looks to .focus the most <br />emphasis on form, followed by management, with use/denSity having the lightest <br />emphasis. This does not mean that use and density are not important; rather, they <br />are not the driving factors in defining a place. <br /> <br />His primary advice was to keep the code simple - the downfall of many zoning <br />ordinances has been their attempt to be overtly inclusive of all possible uses. <br />However, form-based codes do address use types that are appropriate toa district; <br />tables describing the uses associated with an area are often included in the code. <br /> <br />@Copyrigl1t 2004 APA All Rights Reserved <br /> <br />http://www.planning.org/conferencecoverage/2004/tuesday/formbased.htm <br /> <br />1/3/2005 <br />