Is the code written to allow for predictable development without sacrificing variety?
From the website of Smart Growth America
By Tyler Quinn-Smith ·
A quote from this article:
Residents, business owners, and local officials pour their hearts into the visioning process for the future of their community. It’s this up-front consensus building and visualization — which typically takes place during a community engagement process — that result in a clear description of the development patterns the community wants and is passionate about.
Rendering of development under the University Neighborhood Specific Plan in Palm Desert, CA, winner of the 2017 Driehaus Award. (Image: Sargent Town Planning)
It’s time to pick the nation’s top form-based code. While this type of zoning is catching on, some form-based codes can miss the mark if they deviate from best practices. That’s where the Form-Based Codes Institute’s standards—and the Driehaus Award—come in.
Not all form-based codes are created equally. Whether it’s due to the absence of political understanding or buy-in, a shortage of staff capacity, misconceptions about form-based codes, or being overly complex, many form-based codes meander away from the fundamental principles that make them attractive in the first place—improved predictability, ease of use, and the creation of a high-quality public realm.
The annual Richard H. Driehaus Form-Based Codes Award recognizes exemplary models for other communities to follow and demonstrates how powerful form-based codes can be for any community pursuing more walkable, people-scaled growth.
Each applicant is evaluated by a jury of experts against well-defined criteria that separate the so-so codes from the truly commendable. The jury will meet this week to select the 2019 Driehaus Award winner(s), which will be announced on June 14 in Louisville, KY at the 27th Congress for New Urbanism. Below is a summary of the criteria they will use to evaluate each applicant.
1Will the code promote good urbanism?
Putting together a high-quality public realm is not easy. Public and private spaces need to be arranged in a way that enlivens the street and creates a memorable place. This means careful placement and orientation of buildings, engaging building design, and common-sense parking standards that add up to an inviting public space for pedestrians. Close coordination and cooperation with the departments of public works and emergency services on street standards and designs that fit their surroundings is also important.
Exemplary form-based codes successfully create walkable and identifiable neighborhoods that provide most of life’s daily needs in close proximity to places where people live, work and play.
The form-based code for the University Neighborhood in Palm Desert, CA won a Driehaus Award in 2017 for its clear direction in creating excellent walkable places. The jury said that this code addresses both the public realm and private development to create properly scaled corridors that are comfortable and appealing to pedestrians.
2Is the code simple and easy to use?
Conventional, use-based zoning codes are often heavy on text, short on illustrations, and use overly technical language. Good form-based codes are designed to make zoning approachable, concise, and understandable for everyone—a first-time homeowner, a developer, an architect, or a skilled planning professional. The layout should make navigating the document easy, and the outcome and steps in the decision-making tree and the development outcome should be clearly defined. All technical terms are spelled out in plain english and graphics and images are plentiful to convey the intent—a picture is worth a thousand words, especially when talking about form.
The Akanda SmartCode for Gabon, Africa earned a Driehaus Award in 2018 for fool-proof accessibility and straightforward decision-making in the administrative process. The detailed explanations—along with an impressive balance of graphics to text—make the code especially useful as an educational document in different settings around the world. A unique feature is the instructions for each user that provide guidance on which part of the code is relevant, whether it’s a single building or an entire neighborhood.
The Akanda SmartCode provides different types of users with simple checklists and a small set of applicable pages to guide them through the coding process. (Image: Opticos Design)
3Is the code written to allow for predictable development without sacrificing variety?
Residents, business owners, and local officials pour their hearts into the visioning process for the future of their community. It’s this up-front consensus building and visualization—which typically takes place during a community engagement process—that result in a clear description of the development patterns the community wants and is passionate about. [emphasis added]
This means the code must weave in community taste and articulate the development that the community expects. The vision should be apparent to all users and require them to execute the intent of the vision without sacrificing variety in the size and shape of urban spaces and the design of buildings.
The form-based code for Nashville, TN earned a Driehaus Award in 2017 for its immersive characterization of each downtown neighborhood with detailed attention to the features that create these distinct places. The code demonstrates how a community vision can be translated into development that residents admire.
4Is the code enforceable?
Form-based codes are sparked by a passionate community vision that pinpoints the features and character cherished by residents and identifies how they aspire to grow. It’s important for the code to drive this intent all the way through implementation and that existing regulations and policies—like underlying zoning, emergency services policies, building codes, subdivision regulations, and landscaping standards—compliment the code. The code should be clear and user-friendly and formatted for convenient use by staff, developers, and others who use it. The code should also be easy to update as conditions, technology, and market demands change.
The form-based code and design guidelines for Delray Beach, FL won a Driehaus Award in 2016. In recognizing the code, the jury cited the elevated expectations for desired architecture, character of place, response to climate, and respect for history. Delray Beach’s code and architectural guidelines work in concert to produce an enforceable and predictable architecture for structures in the downtown.
Left: Commercial use streetscape for Delray Beach. Right: new buildings must match the size, scale, and style of adjacent structures. Pictured here is a style of building known as the “Florida Vernacular” and how it might be integrated with existing structures. (Images: Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council)
5Good examples lead the way
Form-based zoning harkens back to the land use practices of the past that focused on building walkable, interesting communities for people (as opposed to conventional zoning, which has segregated people and encouraged destructive sprawl). As communities across the country seek to manage growth in a sustainable, equitable way—i.e. smart growth—they are turning to form-based codes to provide the regulatory framework for such growth.
By recognizing exemplary form-based codes through the Driehaus Award program, the Form-Based Codes Institute highlights those codes that stay true to the standards of practice by prioritizing predictability, functionality, and high-quality public space. Stay tuned, the 2019 Driehaus Awards jury will announce this year’s best form-based code(s) next month.
From the website of Smart Growth America
Authors: Marina Khoury, RA CNU LEED is a partner at DPZ CoDESIGN and chairs the Steering Committee of the Form-Based Codes Institute at Smart Growth America. Tyler Quinn-Smith is a program associate at Smart Growth America and manages the Richard H. Driehaus Form-Based Codes Awards program.