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What Does a Healthy Community Look Like? Bruce Race, FAIA, AICP RACESTUDIO NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

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What Does a Healthy Community Look Like?

Bruce Race, FAIA, AICP RACESTUDIO

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Overview

• How do you measure a healthy city? What are the indicators?

• What does design have to do with it?• What can States do to create mote

competitive and healthier communities?

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Test Your Indicators

• How do you measure a healthy city? What are the indicators?

• ASSIGNMENT:

1. ___________________________2. ___________________________3. ___________________________

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Test Your Indicators–NASA’s Version

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Test Your Indicators–Bruce’s Version

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Human Health Indicators

• Health–Obesity, diabetes, heart disease, mental health

• Social– Crime, education, isolation

• Environmental–Air quality, water quality, brown fields

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Sustainability–Assigning Value to the Future

• Energy consumption

• Renewable resources

• Land-efficient development patterns

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Cultural Identity–Values, Culture and Tradition• Natural setting• Historical and cultural

preservation• Events and traditions

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

What does design have to do with it?

• ASSIGNMENT: From memory, draw a map of your community. You have two minutes. GO.

• Now circle your favorite place and list three reasons why:

1. _________________________2. _________________________3. _________________________

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

What does design have to do with it?

• Postwar urban planning–systems and efficiency-driven

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

What does design have to do with it?

• Infrastructure to support land speculation

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

What does design have to do with it?

• Regulations that control land speculation

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

What does design have to do with it?

• Results do NOT vary…

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Design is an Integrative Activity

Restoration Tax Credits and Façade Restoration Program

LRT System Regional Plan and $25M Redevelopment Commitment

Park Design Competition and Renovation

First PBID in California and Downtown Partnership Management

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Design is an Integrative Activity

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Design is an Integrative Activity

• Making places–space, activity and path• Sensory-driven planning• Adaptable to the place–culturally relevant

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

What can States do to create more competitive and healthier communities?

• ASSIGNMENT: List three ways your state rewards the design of healthy cities?

1. ______________________________ 2. ______________________________ 3. ______________________________

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Process for Creating Healthy Cities

• The Planning Process-vision, policies, regulations and implementation (Oregon, New Jersey, Maryland, Michigan’s “Cool Cities” initiative)

• The Political Process–special interests push favorable regulatory bills

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Policy

Plans

Regulations

Zoning/Guidelines

Vision Implementation

1 2 3 4

Dream City–Healthy Community PROVIDING

CHOIC

NGA • Designing Healthy CommunitiesE

Providing Choice

• Capturing community values• It is a QUALITATIVE question• Transit–modal split• Human life-cycle

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Providing Choice–Community Values

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Providing Choice–Community Values

Density–Who’s been to Paris?Comparison of Densities (Pop/SM)

1990 1999Salinas 5,848 6,900Monterey 3,804 3,940Santa Cruz 3,687 4,188Modesto 5,454 6,112San Jose 4,560 5,300Fresno 3,574 4,191Bakersfield 1,904 2,514Sacramento 3,835 4,114Davis 5,501 6,666Berkeley 9,783 10,371San Francisco 15,500 16,930New York City – 24,000

NGA • Designing Healthy CommunitiesParis 53,130 52,430

Density–Who’s been to Paris?

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Therefore–It’s a qualitative question...

Snout House

Dead WallHomer

Simpson Duplex

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

…definitely. Qualitative.

Monster with CheeseNGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Providing Choice–Great NeighborhoodsPublic Partners:Monterey Bay Unified Air Pollution Control District

Public Partners:California Pollution Control Financing AuthoritySustainable Communities Grant and Loan Program

Santa Cruz ADU ManualCal APA AwardAIACC Design Award

Watsonville Livable Community Residential Design Guidelines

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Providing Choice–Modal SplitWho drives most by region? Year 2000

City Pop./SM Miles/pop.

Houston 1,618 37Detroit 2,942 24SF/Oakland 3,343 22New York/ 4,313 15NE New JerseySource: Federal Highway Administration

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Providing Choice–Cities and the Human Life-cycle

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Singles20-24

Mingles24-34

Jiggles49-59

Providing Choice–Cities and the Human Life-cycle

Condition of Public Schools

Year 1999Source: National Center for Educational Statistics

Schools in central cities were more likely to be in poor condition

Schools with higher concentration of poverty to report at least one unsatisfactory environmental condition

In 1999, the average school was 40 years old

Severe overcrowding (more than 25%) is most prevalent in with schools with over 50% minority enrollment

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Providing Choice–Cities and the Human Life-cycle

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Rewarding Good Behavior

• Health– Second worst air quality

in America

• Sustainability– Expanding biomass

renewable energy– Protecting natural and

working landscapes

• Cultural identity– Preparing Scenic Tulare

County element

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Rewarding Good Behavior

• Health– Brown Fields (old

RR yards)

• Sustainability– Infill development– New residential

neighborhood

• Cultural identity– New civic center– Cultural district

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Creating Incentives• Real estate INDUSTRY part of the American

Tradition– Property rights– Influential

• Fiscal rewards of healthy public policy – Fiscalization of land use–the “F” word– Counties and cities compete for sales tax

• Regulations– Concern about global competition for agriculture– Cooperation among jurisdictions–incorporated

cities and special districts

Since the mid-1950s the federal government has spent eight times as much money to build sprawl-inducing highways than density-supporting mass transit. The federal tax code provides eleven times the tax breaks for home owners (mostly suburban) than it offers to apartment owners (mostly city-based).

David Rusk, Former Mayor of Albuquerque, Author

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

Conclusions: The Governor’s Role

• Expressing a vision of communities that balance human health, sustainability and cultural traditions

• Integrative policymaking–suite of policies, regulations, programs and funding solutions

• Rewarding good behavior–incentives, awards/recognitions

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities

What Does a Healthy Community Look Like?

Bruce Race, FAIA, AICP RACESTUDIO

NGA • Designing Healthy Communities