A legislative method of regulating land use by the division of a political subdivision into districts and the enactment of local regulations to control buildings and uses within the district.
Or…
Regulating Private Land for the Public Good
What is Zoning?
• Designate selected land uses and building requirements to appropriate areas in the community.• Keeping a constant and visually
pleasing setting
• To prevent incompatible uses.• Prevent interference with
existing residents or businesses.
• To insure coordination of infrastructure services• Commercial, business,
agricultural
• To protect quality of life (health/safety)
• Direct, manage and control growth
Purposes of zoning
• height of buildings
• use of green space
• density (number of structures in a certain area)
• use of lots
• types of businesses.
Specific examples
• Controls on land use begin mid-nineteenth century due to health/safety concerns
• Nations first building code
• Fire of 1871
• Did not provide adequate protection
• Early 1910’s
• Priority for city officials to address concerns to aesthetics and property values.
• Chicago turns towards adopting a city wide zoning ordinance in response to NYC zoning ordinance of 1916
Chicago
• May 1, 1893
• Changed Chicago from an industrialist city to a more “inviting” city
• Proved that city had risen, prosperous and strong, from the ashes and was ready to take its place in the front rank of the world's great cities
The “White City”
Urban Development in ClevelandNew England Puritan Culture on the Shore of Lake Erie – Western Reserve of Conneticut
Mark Hanna – Republican Party kingmaker
John D. Rockefeller – first billionaire
Cleveland Urban Politics: Thomas L. Johnson
Elected mayor of Cleveland in 1901
Urban government provided few public services at the time
Progressives, led by Johnson, set out to “redeem” municipal government
Municipal public services expanded Associated with low fare for street cars
“White City” of the Chicago Exposition Influences Cleveland’s Development
Cleveland Architectural Club sponsored competition for formal grouping of Cleveland’s Public Buildings (1895)
Enabling legislation passed by Ohio state legislature facilitates the Cleveland Group Plan
Mayor Johnson Implements
“Group Plan”
Influence of Baron Haussman strong “Haussmanization”
Private land subjected to public good
Fitted into the progressive ideology
Public buildings arranged around a Mall – laid out on 44 acre site
Nearly a century of sporadic efforts – but largely realized
Issues of “Zoning”Exclusionary Zoning: prohibit low- and
moderate-income housing
Housing Discrimination
• Minimum lot sizes and Floor Space requirements
• Large-lot zoning imposes burden on low-
and moderate-income people
• Limited- Growth Zoning
• Strict Subdivision Requirements
Exclusionary Zoning Continued Strict building Codes
Prohibit Subsidized Housing
•Refuse all attempts of
subsidized housing • New York
Discrimination in Housing• Fair Housing Act 1968
• Mount Laurel I• New Jersey Supreme Court in 1975 - Southern Burlington County
N.A.A.C.P. v. Mount Laurel Township. Plaintiffs challenged the zoning ordinance of Mount Laurel Township, New Jersey, on the grounds that it operated to exclude low and moderate income persons from obtaining housing in the municipality.
• Mount Laurel II• After an appeal by the plaintiffs, the decision of Mount Laurel II
created specific requirements that every town in New Jersey must provide its “fair share” of the regional need for low- and moderate-income housing. Towns would have to provide a “realistic opportunity” for such housing.
Fair Share Housing Act and the Opening to New Jersey suburbs to the Poor
Inclusionary Zoning
Fair Share Housing• Mount Laurel, NJ
• Doctrine that prohibits economic discrimination against poor by the state and municipalities in the exercise of their land powers
• First case of its type and is regarded as one of the most significant Civil Rights cases in the United States since Brown vs. Board of Education (1954)
Euclid, Ohio vs. Amber Realty Co.Decided by U.S Supreme Court in 1926• Zoning as important and legitimate exercise of police powers
• zoning restrictions on the use of the land could be supported by valid considerations of public health, safety, morals, and general welfare, made in the interest of preserving the character and quality of the neighborhood.
1. How did the “White City” influence other cities?
2. In what ways did the White City change the layout of Chicago?
3. What kind of “zoning area” is this?
A. Commercial
B. Industrial
C. Residential
Questions
http://fairsharehousing.org/mount-laurel-doctrine/
http://www.mountlaurel.com/about/mtlaurel_decisions.php
http://planning.utah.gov/super/SUPER/Training/Citizen_Planner/Zoning%20and%20the%20Zoning%20Ordinance.pdf
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/1401.html
http://xroads.virginia.edu/~cap/citybeautiful/city.html
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/politics/chi-chicagodays-columbianexposition-story,0,1555067.story
http://rsc.byu/archived/regional-studies-latter-day-saint-church-history-ohio-and-upper-canada/6-religion-and-ethni
http://www.teachingcleveland.org/index.php?option=com content&view=article&id=794:the-abolition-movement-in-northeast-ohio&catid=257:the-abolition-movement&itemid=56
http://www.teachiingcleveland.org/index.php?option=com k2&view=itemlist&layout=category&task=category&id=168&itemid=285
http://www.clevelandmemory.org/groupplan/
http://ech.case.edu/ech-cgi/article.pl?id=CAC2
References