Note: Table 1 is located at the end of
this text. The complete book can be found on Amazon.com.
Zoning ordinances attempt to lead the increment-
al growth of urban areas with a vocabulary that has not consistently produced success and avoided failure. It addresses the Shelter Division of a Built Domain that is served by its Movement, Open Space, and Life Support Divisions, but its success to date can be summarized with the terms “sprawl” and “over-development”. Random success has received awards that hope to encourage similar results, but these awards struggle with inadequate measurement, evaluation, and direction toward the success pictured but not adequately defined. This arbitrary pattern of success and failure can be improved with an amended vocabulary of zoning specification and the design leadership it enables.
al growth of urban areas with a vocabulary that has not consistently produced success and avoided failure. It addresses the Shelter Division of a Built Domain that is served by its Movement, Open Space, and Life Support Divisions, but its success to date can be summarized with the terms “sprawl” and “over-development”. Random success has received awards that hope to encourage similar results, but these awards struggle with inadequate measurement, evaluation, and direction toward the success pictured but not adequately defined. This arbitrary pattern of success and failure can be improved with an amended vocabulary of zoning specification and the design leadership it enables.
The gray boxes in Table 1 combine to define the
characteristics of a building served by grade parking around, but not under,
the building. The shelter design alternative is referred to as G1. In this
example, gross land area is given and its capacity to accommodate gross
building area is to be found. Answers depend on the values and floor quantity
options entered in the gray design specification boxes of Table 1. The values
entered are processed by the algorithm noted in the Planning Forecast Panel of
Table 1. Optional line item answers are related to the floor quantity alternatives
entered in cells A44-A53. The line item implications of each gross building
area option are calculated in the adjoining Implications Module.
Shelter capacity, or gross building area per buildable acre,
is calculated in Col. F of the Planning Forecast Panel and may be occupied by
any activity. It is a critical piece of planning information that will
determine our ability to shelter the activities of growing populations, without
excessive intensity, within geographic limits that do not expand to consume our
source of life.
The G1 design values entered in the gray specification boxes
of Table 1 define the relationship of building mass and service pavement to the
amount of offsetting unpaved open space provided. The master equation in cell
B39 is used to predict the gross building area options presented in Col. B of
the Planning Forecast Panel. When the forecasts are divided by the buildable
acres occupied, the shelter capacity options in Col. F are produced. The
intensity of these options is measured in Col. G to compare increasing shelter
capacity with its intensity implications.
Gross building area alternatives produce measurable levels
of shelter capacity, intensity, intrusion, and dominance within the
neighborhoods, districts, cities, and regions they combine to create. These
implications are calculated at the cellular level in the Implications Module of
Table 1. A change to one or more of the values entered in the gray specification
boxes of a design specification template will produce a new set of planning
forecasts and implication measurements.
A chosen shelter capacity and intensity alternative can be
defined by the specification values that are correlated to create the option.
Thousands of technical form, function, and appearance decisions ensue to define
a final product, but the foundation is established with these initial urban
design decisions. The G1.L1 forecast model presented in Table 1 enables
measurement, evaluation, prediction, and definition. The topics and values
involved create an urban design vocabulary that can be used for knowledge
formation and leadership improvement within a Built Domain that must be limited
to coexist with its source of life – the Natural Domain.
When values are entered in the gray boxes of Table 1, they
define the contents of a G1 cell in the urban anatomy. An algorithm correlates
these choices to calculate leadership information. The correlation produces a
prediction of options in a Planning Forecast Panel and a prediction of
implications in an Implications Module. These predictions will change whenever
one or more of the values in the specification are modified. The process offers
the opportunity to measure existing conditions and predict future capacity and
intensity options with a consistent set of criteria that permit comparison and
evaluation of the implications calculated. As a result, success can be
measured, failure can be avoided, and knowledge can be accumulated on a track
parallel to that of traditional aesthetic criticism.
A zoning ordinance attempts to consistently produce the
results intended by the master plan it supplements based on a concept of
minimum standards that are written to protect the public’s health, safety, and
welfare. The problem has been that these standards have not been mathematically
correlated. The resulting contradictions have been one source of “hardship”
variance requests and inconsistent judgments by appointed residents from the
community. Table 1 resolves this issue for the G1 Building Design Category by
mathematically correlating the design topics and items that interact to produce
gross building area results for any given land area; and it calculates the
capacity, intensity, intrusion, and dominance implications produced by a set of
value entries. The fact that these values can be modified to produce
alternative results presents the opportunity to evaluate and define correlated
sets of minimum standards with the confidence that they will produce the
implications forecast.
Table 1 illustrates the use of one fail-safe measure that
deserves special mention. The total unpaved open space percentage of a
buildable land area must be specified in cell F11. This can be either a planned,
present, or required percentage; but the entire topic is often overlooked,
ignored, or marginalized in an effort to maximize the gross building area and
parking potential of a given land or lot area. When it is ignored, the
intensity added to the neighborhood is unknown and the runoff produced by
excessive impervious cover is rarely correlated with the storm sewer capacity
present or planned. Cell F11 in Table 1 ensures that unpaved open space is
included as a conscious decision and correlated within a complete design
specification.
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