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Tools for Decision-Making and Design Objective Setting. Module 3 BCRUPD Training. From the Previous Training Module/s. Session Outline. CC Responsive Urban Design Principles & Objectives to Guide Implementation
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Tools for Decision-Making and Design Objective Setting Module 3 BCRUPD Training
Session Outline • CC Responsive Urban Design Principles & Objectives to Guide Implementation • Linkages of Urban Plans and Design tools/methods within the Rationalized Planning Process in the Philippines • Promoting Climate Resilience thru Urban Design Guide (at the city/municipal level) • Statutory Instruments • Non-statutory Instruments • Cases • Steps to consider in developing CC Resilient Urban Design Policies
Promoting Climate Resilience thru Urban Plans and Design • Statutory and non-statutory tools and instruments (NZ example) ? Process = Values and Principles Actual Design = Realization • Promotes climate change resilience
Planning and Design Tools Working Together (example from NZ UD toolkit)
UPD: Process and Design Principles • Process is as important as the resulting design • All starts with having a clear set of principles that would frame the climate resilient urban plans and design • Ultimate guiding principle is still Sustainable Development that brings about: Social inclusion, Economic vitality and prosperity, and Environmental protection and conservation • “Design Principles are used to help identify what is special about a place and what needs fixing”* Process = Values and Principles Actual Design = Realization “help avoid developing visions for towns and cities that will never be built, or good processes that result in poor built environment”* *Source: Design Guide for Urban New Zealand How does the need for climate change resilience fit in? What scale? Which part?
Urban Plans and Design tools/methods within the Rationalized Planning Process in the Philippines CVDRA and LCCAP PPDFP, CLUP-ZO, CDP CLUP-ZO, CDP, BLUP, Transport Plan Site Development Plan, Project Document
Climate Resilient Design Guide “Statutory design guides, often called ‘design criteria’, have legal status and provide explicit criteria for assessing the quality of design outcomes. These guides should contain explanations and/or illustrations to demonstrate the context and rationale for design principles. They should also include design objectives to clarify the intent of the guidelines and allow for flexibility in the design approach”. “Non-statutory design guides are used for education and advocacy and, when combined with promotion, can be an effective means of distributing information on quality design. Because there is no compulsion for a developer or designer to consider a non-statutory design guide, it will be most effective when the majority of users are persuaded that it is in their interests to follow the guide. It should be attractively presented, use accessible language and graphics, and be supported by ongoing promotion”. “Design Guides are powerful means to promote and achieve climate resilience when it is informed with and uses climate information” Site- or area-specific design guides are also used by private developers and can take the form of a design code, pattern book or covenant where they are implemented by means of a legal agreement or covenant. __________________________________________________ Source: NZ urban design toolkit third edition
Cases and Examples New Zealand (national guide)
Scale: City-wide/town-wide/village-wide Sites and Subdivisions
Parks and Public Spaces and Streets Private Plots
Cases and Examples New York (city-level)
“The Guidelines recommend that project designers consider the two aspects of the relationship between their project and increasing heat: the way their project increases or reduces the Urban Heat Island effect as well as the impact that rising average temperatures and increased frequency of extreme heat days will have on the physical components or on the operations of the facility itself”
Cases and Examples Hong-Kong (Study and Urban Design Guideline)
Cases and Examples Kuala Lumpur (inspired by the HK AVA study)
Part of the conclusion says… “This study employed the model which is designed to suit Hong Kong’s urban scenario. Even though both cities experience similar climate, there are several differences in terms of urban scenarios between these two cities. Therefore, a model which suits the City of Kuala Lumpur should be developed. A UC-AnMap should be able to translate the complex meteorological and climatological data into a simpler form of “language” to be easily understood by urban planners and policy makers”.
Cases and Examples Australia and UK (WSUD)
Climate Resilient Urban Plans and Design in PH Given our urban development and urbanization context: • What urban issues and trends should we focus on given our climate realities? What needs protection? What needs to be fixed? • What processes should we involve? • What design objective should we achieve given climate impacts-- At the higher-level urban context? At the local and public realm? • What urban climate change “principles” should we promote?