1 / 32

Transportation Oriented Development in the New York Metropolitan Region

Robert N. Lane, Director Regional Design Program. Transportation Oriented Development in the New York Metropolitan Region. Regional Plan Association www.rpa.org. Transit Oriented Development in the NY Region: Brownfield redevelopment Retrofitting sprawl Intensifying centers. TOD Growth.

sol
Télécharger la présentation

Transportation Oriented Development in the New York Metropolitan Region

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Robert N. Lane, Director Regional Design Program Transportation Oriented Development in the New York Metropolitan Region Regional Plan Association www.rpa.org

  2. Transit Oriented Development in the NY Region: • Brownfield redevelopment • Retrofitting sprawl • Intensifying centers TOD Growth Existing Trend Growth

  3. What is the Share of Workers Who Reach Their New Jersey Jobs by Rail? • To Jersey City - 21% (9 lines) – PATH, light rail line highly frequent service • To Newark – 9% (6 lines) – PATH, Newark Subway, NEC, NJCL • Trenton – 1% (2 lines) – NEC • To New Brunswick - 1% (1 line) - NEC • Elizabeth -1% (2 lines) - NEC • To Atlantic City - 1% (1 line) – once an hour

  4. Somerville Landfill and Station Area Planning Study

  5. Overview - Design access ownership environment Wetlands 38 a (33%) Somerville Borough 58 a NJ Transit 38 a Other 19 a Total 115 a

  6. Overview – Design • The “Hub” • The “Heights” • The “Green Seam”

  7. Overview – Design Downtown gateway Mixed-use station area New civic space Two new neighborhoods Green gateway

  8. Station Area Hotel Movie Theatre

  9. Overview – Design

  10. Overview – Design

  11. Overview – Design Total Open Space 41 a (36%) Trails Open Space Framework

  12. Overview – Design

  13. Technical Lesson: The Architecture Does Matter • A deteriorating suburban corridor is saved • Multiple actors • Public subsidy • Control over land use • Transportation • Very high transit share • Good car access The Rosslyn-Ballston Corridor

  14. Technical Lesson: The Architecture Does Matter • Implementation • Consistency • Public participation • Issues • Quality of urban design • Affordability

  15. Technical Lesson: Parking Can Be Managed Creatively

  16. Technical Lesson: Parking Can Be Managed creatively

  17. Technical Lesson: Density needs to be explained Understanding density Is Density “du per acre” or perception? Use local precedents

  18. Technical Lesson: Explain Housing Revenue

  19. Technical Lesson: Explain Housing • Tax: $300,000 • Units: 105 • Density: 18 du/acre • Cars/unit: 1.85 • Children/unit: .05-.1 Understanding Housing Franklin Square, Metucheon

  20. Technical Lesson: Create A Flexible Framework for Development Calibrate to local capabilities Netcong, NJ

  21. Process Lesson: Use a Diversity of Formats Diversity of formats town hall meetings, charrettes, and other convenings Diversity of media Interactive models

  22. Process Lesson: Use a Diversity of Formats

  23. Process Lesson: Design an Iterative Process • Technical Studies • Land use • analysis • Market • reconnaisance • Transportation • analysis Workshop #1: Steering Committee shared understanding expectations management vision statement Workshop #2: Steering Committee plus Stakeholders expectations management concept design alternatives Workshop #3: Steering Committee plus Stakeholders schematic design consensus Workshop #4: Presentation to larger group final design final analysis • Visioning • What do you • really want? • Principles • Issues and • Opportunities Plan Guidelines Implementation Strategy Concerns

  24. Process Lesson: Design an Iterative Process Netcong, NJ Iterative Process: Test schemes and “straw men”

  25. Process Lesson: Enable Multiple Levels of Stakeholder Involvement

  26. Technical Lessons Beyond parking and density - find the intersection of: • Transit agency priorities parking, development , ridership • Community based goals and objectives place-making, redevelopment • Technical constraints market, traffic/access, context, environment

  27. Technical Lessons • The architecture DOES matter • Parking can be managed creatively • Density needs to be explained • Housing needs to be explained • Create a flexible framework for redevelopment

  28. Process Lessons • Empower and engage stakeholders • Use a diversity of formats and media • Iterative process and planning • Multiple levels of stakeholder involvement

More Related