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LINKING LAND USE AND TRANSPORTATION TO CREATE A LEGACY. Presented by: Barbara Arens, PE, PTOE Vice President PB Brad Strader, AICP, PTP Managing Partner LSL Planning. Legacy = Bequest, Heritage. Linking transportation and land use can Improve safety Revitalize areas
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LINKING LAND USE AND TRANSPORTATION TO CREATE A LEGACY Presented by: Barbara Arens, PE, PTOE Vice President PB Brad Strader, AICP, PTP Managing Partner LSL Planning
Legacy = Bequest, Heritage Linking transportation and land use can • Improve safety • Revitalize areas • Support commerce/jobs • Alter the environment • Influence community health and quality of life How will you make your mark?
Land Use Influences Transportation Arrangement and density affects number, length, and type of trip: • People living close to work • Commercial and schools within walking distance of residential • Residential and employment densities that support transit • Isolated land uses at low density
Transportation Can Influence Land Use • Street design • Adding/removing parking • Adding/removing lanes • 1-way versus 2-way streets • New roads or interchanges • Add walking/biking paths • Availability of transit, its type • Build By-Pass Washtenaw Access Management Plan: One-Way 3-to-2 Road Diet Concept Charlotte, NC Light Rail
Transportation – Land Use Disconnect • Different agencies or departments • Different educational background • Different time horizons • Future land use: optimism versus reality • Separate planning processes/tools Site PlanApprovals Road Agency Permits PrivateProperties Public Right-of-Way
Land Use Tools to Reduce # and Length of Auto Trips • Compact walkable design • Development where transportation capacity exists or is programmed • Street connections • Density, nodes and design to support transit (TOD)
Mixed-Use Development/TOD • Models need to acknowledge the trip-making distinctions of different land use patterns • Diversity of housing, jobs & retail in close proximity • Complementary uses • More walking and transit use • 10-40% Internal Trip Capture • May impact travel time
Typical Land Use Planning Existing Uses/Traffic & Traffic for Planned Use = Traffic would increase 150% = Significant future congestion Community would not accept extent of widening needed Transportation Improvements Plan Ypsilanti Township, MI
Revised to Consider New Land Use Arrangement as Part of Solution • Revised Future Land Use Map • Rearranged land uses/Shifted densities • LOS D in most cases • Community acceptance Transportation Improvements Plan (New) Ypsilanti Township, MI
How to Better Integrate Land Use with Transportation Planning • Long Range Plans adopted by agency • Tied to funding • Fiscally constrained Local Future Land Use Plans • Long Range Transportation Plans assume community will develop per its plan • Analyze macro, meso, & micro level Employment & Household Projections and Socio-Economic data Projected Deficiencies (congestion) and Alternatives Analysis Recommended Changes – typically to add capacity
Macroscopic Travel Demand Forecasting Models Mesoscopic Modelling DTA Microscopic Simulation Detailed MOEs Transportation Analysis Tools (Macro, Meso, and Micro)
Traffic Analysis Tools • Crash • Roadway and Intersection Assessment • Travel Forecasting Models • Isolated intersection analyses • Microsimulation of network
Connectivity: Streets Designed for Land Use (Context) and Uses Typologies Access N.M. TRANSIT
Street Typologies TYPOLOGIES Local Streets (not shown)
Target “LOS by Mode” by Street Boulevard / Commuter Corridor Local Street Urban Activity Center LSL Planning / City of Lansing, MI Comprehensive Plan
Different Corridor Treatments • Medians – size & width • Access control • Super streets • Intersection control • Roundabouts • Stop signs • Signals • Urban design (streetscape) • Bike lanes • Traffic calming
Context Sensitive Solutions (CSS)at Street Level • How does CSS apply to Streets? • What are Complete Streets? • How do these two Connect?
Complete Streets • Streets planned, designed and operated for all users, ages, and abilities • Interconnected network of roads, sidewalks, pathways & transit • Facilitate movement along and across streets • Match street design to user needs and context
Streets have a “Place” Function “There is magic to great streets. We are attracted to the best of them not because we have to go there but because we want to be there.” -Allan B. Jacobs, Great Streets
Great Places Have Great Streets • Accessibility • Attractiveness • Livability • Community • Interactions • Safety
Elements of Complete Streets • Connect to Land Use • Walking • Biking • Lighting • Traffic Management • Transit Availability • Street Furniture • Landscaping • People Places
Contextually Complete Streets & CSS What is different about CONTEXTUALLY Complete Streets? Context & Stakeholders Define What is Meant by “Complete” One Size Does Not Fit All!
Contextually Complete Streets: Approach • Application of Context Sensitive Solutions to Complete Streets: • Proactive Stakeholder Involvement • Project Focused Inter-Disciplinary Team • Communication and Collaboration
Successful Contextually Complete Streets Have: Project-Focused Interdisciplinary Team Proactive Stakeholder Involvement • Urban Planners/Designers • Environmental • Landscape Architects • Engineers • Civil • Traffic • Utility • Lighting • Drainage • Construction • Maintenance • Transit • Pedestrians • Cyclists • Truckers • Passenger Vehicles/Taxis • Parking Agencies • Law Enforcement/Fire Departments • Residents/Land Owners • Businesses/Chamber of Commerce • Citizen Groups • Environmental Groups • Utility Companies
Contextually Complete Streets: Tools • Accommodating Transit • Designing for Bikes & Pedestrians • The Grid • Road Diets • Managing Lanes • Traffic Calming • On-street Parking • Green Treatments • New Design Guidelines
Road Diets – Reduce # of Lanes • Consider: • Function & environment • Traffic volumes (consider for 8,500 – 24,000 vpd) • Peak hour operations • Crash types, all modes • Impact on parallel roads • Space for amenities • On-street parking • Bike lanes • More green space Before After Washtenaw County Access Management Plan: One-Way 3-to-2 Road Diet Concept
Simple as re-striping Cost-effective Optional enhancements Enhances environment Tools - Road Diets
Surface arterial “downscale” Reduces through lanes Adds turn lanes May accommodate traffic without widening Improves safety Community context benefits Road Diet Concept Smaller Can Be Better
Tools – Bus Lanes Differentiated • Colored Pavements – “Painted Tracks” • Provides Identity and branding of transit system • Passive enforcement for vehicular motorists • Way finding path to next station for patron
Bicycle racks Bicycle lanes/Cycle track Multi-use paths Wider curb lane Smooth surfaces Regular maintenance Curb inlets/bicycle-safe grates Tools - Designing for Bicyclists
Removing pedestrian hazards Continuous sidewalks, minimum 5 feet Curb extensions (bulb-outs) Median refuge islands Pedestrian crossings/signals Raised pavement Safe/Convenient transit stops Landscaping with good visibility Adequate lighting Tools - Designing for Pedestrians Photo by Jennifer Rosales, PB
Applying all the Tools for Successful Complete Streets • New Jersey Route 9 • Boulder, Colorado • Ann Arbor, Michigan Transportation Plan Update/University of Michigan
New Jersey Route 9: Matching the Road to the Community Higher Density: Current Reality Higher Density: Future Concept
Boulder, CO Known for Streets That are Destinations
Boulder, Colorado: All arterials should be multi-modal corridors for auto, pedestrian, bicycle, and transit use.
Case Study – Ann Arbor, MI City Transportation Plan • Coordinated with transit agency, university, city, county & MPO • Increased planned residential & employment density to encourage more transit/walking (TOD) • Planned transit corridors to serve major land use changes • Balanced investment in all modes and phased implementation
TOD Corridor Overlay Zoning Transit-Oriented Should Have • 5-7+ Units per acre (bus) • 25-40 employees + residents per acre* • Compact development • Appropriate mix of uses Transit-Oriented Should NOT have • Low density residential • Deep building setbacks • Auto related uses *Zupan and Pushkarev. 1977. Public Transportation and Land Use Policy.
Ann Arbor, MI Conclusion Depending on part of town, implementation included: • Increased bus service/park and ride facilities • Road Diet locations identified • Planned transit corridors to meet community/University needs • Key corridor redevelopment with signature transit proposed/multi-modal network development • Short, Medium, and Long Range Implementation Plan (20 years) for all modes • New zoning regulations (TOD, Form-Based Code)
Form-Based Codes • Regulates physical form, with a lesser focus on use • Defines the streetscape to ensure proper building : street relationship • Combines zoning regulations and street design standards into one code Leesburg Crescent District Plan & Form-Based Code
Case Study: Birmingham Triangle Plan • Street redesign and parking to stimulate change • Urban Plan and Form-Based Code • Within two days of plan approval, submittal of plans for $25-million development and major mixed-use building City of Birmingham Triangle Plan
Creating a Transportation Legacy • Understand current policies & procedures • Identify ways to integrate decision-making • Integrate land use and transportation planning • Audit regulations and update • Evaluate current street design standards • Prioritize and invest in all modes Courtesy FMLA Opportunity to change our mindset. . . . . .from avoiding negatives to creating positives What will you do to leave your legacy?
Contact Information Brad Strader Barbara Arens strader@lslplanning.com 248.586.0505 arens@pbworld.com 313.963.4651