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Transfer of Development Rights TDR. Smart Growth / Smart Energy Toolkit. Development patterns based on conventional zoning create less than optimal conditions. Underdeveloped Commercial Centers. Overdeveloped Residential Sprawl. Transfer of Developments Rights Two-Fold Objective.
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Transfer of Development Rights TDR Smart Growth / Smart Energy Toolkit
Development patterns based on conventional zoning create less than optimal conditions Underdeveloped Commercial Centers Overdeveloped Residential Sprawl
Transfer of Developments Rights Two-Fold Objective Concentrate Development in Growth Centers Preserve Existing Open Space
TDR Definitions Development Rights The amount of development that could take place on a tract of land under Zoning Bylaw provisions. Sending Areas Areas identified as priorities for preservation or significant decreases in development potential.
TDR Definitions (continued) Receiving Area Areas that have potential to support more development than what is allowed by existing bylaws and/or regulations. TDR Credit Bank A third party entity that can store and administer the sale of development rights.
Transfer of Developments Rights The Concept Owner of “sending” parcel sells development rights in exchange for permanent conservation easement. growth area preservation area Owner of “receiving” parcel buys development rights to build at densities higher than allowed under base zoning.
Potential Sending Areas • Prime Agricultural Lands • Chapter 61 parcels • Large Tracts of Unprotected Open Space • Aquifer Protection Overlays • Areas of Critical Environmental Concern • Habitat for Rare and Endangered Species • Watersheds to Sensitive Surface Waters • Historic Districts or Structures
Potential Receiving Areas • Village Centers • Transportation Nodes • Commercial or Industrial Districts • Areas Served by Infrastructure • Centralized Water Supply • Centralized Sewer System • Public Transportation Routes
Sending and Receiving Areas Should Be Identified Through A Comprehensive Planning Process
TDR: Alternative Futures ? The future with conventional zoning The future The present The future with TDR zoning
Implementing TDRThe Basic Questions • Clearly Defined Sending and Receiving Areas • “What are the resources we need to protect?” • “Where can we handle increases in development capacity?” • Adequate Administrative Capacity • “Do we have a permitting body that clearly understands the program?” • “Do we need a TDR Credit Bank?” • “Will the City/Town play a role in establishing the value of development rights or will the market be used to establish value?”
CASE STUDY Montgomery County, Maryland Sending Area identified as 90,000 acres of undeveloped agricultural land. Area down-zoned from 5-acre minimum lot size to 25-acre minimum. Development rights can be traded at the original density. Receiving areas identified by proximity to existing infrastructure. Density bonuses awarded at varied scaled depending on the location of the Receiving Area.
Paramount Theater Restoration CASE STUDY Seattle, Washington YMCA Building Restoration • Complex urban TDR Program relies heavily on a TDR Credit Bank to facilitate transactions. • Primary goals: • Preserve Historic Structures • Preserve Existing Affordable • Housing • Incentives for Varied Building • Scale • Infill Development of Compatible • Character W Hotel Development
CASE STUDY Falmouth, MA • Sending Areas Identified through • Careful Planning Process: • Water Resource Protection District • Chapter 61A Parcels • Areas of Critical Environmental Concern • Coastal Resource Overlay District Receiving Areas are eligible for Density Bonuses that vary between 20% to 40% depending on the underlying zoning
USEFUL LINKS: government.cce.cornell.edu/doc/html/Transfer%20of%20Development%20Rights%20Programs.htm TDR Programs: Using the Market for Compensation and Preservation, a paper written by Jason Hanly-Forde, George Homsy, Katherine Lieberknecht, Remington Stone that gives a good overview of this technique. www.dem.ri.gov/programs/bpoladm/suswshed/pdfs/tdrreprt.pdf Transfer of Development Rights Report‘, a study produced for the South County Watershed Technical Planning Assistance Project by the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management. It is one of several reports about creative land use techniques to accommodate growth while minimizing impacts to the environment and community character. www.farmlandinfo.org/documents/27746/FS_TDR_1-01.pdf A Fact Sheet from the Farmland Information Center, a public/private partnership between the American Farmland Trust and the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service.
USEFUL LINKS: www.lincolninst.edu/pubs/pub-detail.asp?id=424 Transfer of Development Rights for Balanced Development, an article (author Robert Lane, 1998) from the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy providing conceptual overview as well as some details regarding TDR case law. www.state.nj.us/dca/osg/resources/tdr/index.shtml TDR: How Does It Work?, a webpage from the NJ Department of Community Affairs' Office of Smart Growth, provides a good overview of the technique. www.nj.gov/agriculture/sadc/tdr.htm New Jersey State Transfer of Development Rights Bank webpage from the NJ Department of Agriculture. www.state.nj.us/dobi/pinelands/pinelandsbank.htm Pinelands Development Credit Bank webpage from the NJ Department of Banking and Credit gives information about a program begun in 1985 which has helped increase the value of development rights and assisted owners in selling their land.