Regional Visioning

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Regional Visioning Land Use and Transportation for Four Million New Residents A Presentation to the New York Metropolitan Transportation Council February 16 th , 2006

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Land Use and Transportation for Four Million New Residents. Regional Visioning. A Presentation to the New York Metropolitan Transportation Council February 16 th , 2006. National & Regional Growth Trends The Land Use-Transportation Connection Visioning Around the Nation & the Region - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Regional Visioning

Page 1: Regional Visioning

Regional VisioningLand Use and Transportation for

Four Million New Residents

A Presentation to the

New York Metropolitan Transportation Council February 16th, 2006

Page 2: Regional Visioning

• National & Regional Growth Trends

• The Land Use-Transportation Connection

• Visioning Around the Nation & the Region

• A Long Island Visioning Initiative

• What’s Next?

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Map: University of Pennsylvania

U.S. Population Change 2005- 2050

National Growth Trends

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Map: University of Pennsylvania

Metropolitan Growth 2005 – 2050

National Growth Trends

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Map: University of Pennsylvania

Emerging U.S. Mega-Regions

70% of Population80% of Job Growth

National Growth Trends

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NYMTC Projections

• An additional 3.83 million people to the Tri-State region

• 1.81 million to NYMTC counties

Tri-State Regional Growth Trends

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Tri-State Regional Growth Trends

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How will the region be able to accommodate this growth at all, much less in a manner that simultaneously achieves economic, environmental and social equity goals?

Tri-State Regional Growth Trends

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Tri-State Regional Growth Trends

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Pre-1960= 0.10 acres/person

1960 to 1990=1.2acres/person

Land consumption per capita has slowed somewhat since 1990, but rapid exurban growth continues

Increasing Land Consumption per Capita :

Pre-1960

1960-90

Tri-State Regional Growth Trends

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Tri-State Regional Growth Trends

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Linking Land Use and Transportation

Revitalized Centers in the Urban Core Around a Robust Transit Network

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Access to Commuter Rail Station by Walking Distance

Linking Land Use and Transportation

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Tappan ZeeLinking Land Use and Transportation

The design of the transportation infrastructure is directly linked to regional land use decisions.

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East Side Access/ LIRR Third TrackLinking Land Use and Transportation

New transportation capacity is critically needed to handle current congestion, but also creates the potential for higher-density development.

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Suburban Centers: Nassau Hub

Linking Land Use and Transportation

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31 COUNTIES3 STATES10 MPOs695 MUNICIPALITIES1 REGION

Fragmented Governance

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A Growing Number of Areas Have Produced Regional Visions To Guide Future Growth

Visioning Around the Nation

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• Inclusive, consensus based process• Define regional values and benchmarks for

measuring success• Educate public on connections between

transportation and land use • Develop growth scenarios and corresponding

transportation investments through several public workshops

• Model indicators from each scenario and measure each against regional value benchmarks

• Implement land use changes in targeted locations

Visioning Around the Nation

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Define Regional Values and Benchmarks for Measuring Success

• Workshops• Surveys• Polling• Existing Plan Review

Visioning Around the Nation

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Develop Growth Scenarios and Corresponding Transportation Investments

Through Several Public Workshops

• Base map accurately depicts conditions on the ground

• Determine where not to grow

• Allocate growth in chosen development scenario

• Determine necessary transportation improvements.

Visioning Around the Nation

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Model Indicators From Each Scenario and Measure Each Against Regional Value

Benchmarks

• Each scenario generated at workshops is digitized

• Land use and transportation entered into model

• Indicators relate to values and benchmarks generated in early stages of process

Visioning Around the Nation

470 Hours 386

Hours

Business As

UsualMetropolis Plan

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Implement Land Use Changes in Targeted Locations

• Changing zoning and development types in limited municipalities can have drastic effect on regional development patters

• Southern California 2% Solution

Visioning Around the Nation

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Lessons from Other Regions

Envision Utah

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Lessons from Other Regions

Chicago Metropolis 2020

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Lessons from Other Regions

SCAG’s Compass

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Los Angeles Compass used the most advanced visualization techniques to convey information to participants

Lessons from Other Regions

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Regional Initiatives

Foundations for Visioning in the Region

• History of regional planning

• Existing NYMTC forecasts

• NYMTC sustainable development studies

• Benchmarking projects, such as Long Island Index

• Several community visioning projects

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Elements of the Concept Plan: Preferred Land Use ScenarioPreferred Land Use Scenario

Regional Initiatives: SEEDS

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Elements of the Concept Plan: Preferred Transportation ScenarioPreferred Transportation Scenario

Local Initiatives: SEEDS

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Local Initiatives: Stamford

Several secondary and tertiary centers were identified throughout the city that support the downtown core.

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Local Initiatives: Stamford

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Local Initiatives: Stamford

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Long Island Visioning Initiative

Planning Underway

• Business, Political & Civic Planning Group, including county planning departments, LIA, LIRPB, Vision LI, Sustainable LI, RPA, others

• Stakeholders meetings in April and December, 2005

• Analysis of prior and existing plans and vision projects

• Baseline analysis• Development of scenario testing model

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Long Island Visioning Initiative

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Base Map

Long Island Visioning Initiative

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Long Island Visioning Initiative

Two Test Scenarios

Large-Lot

Small-Lot

SuburbanAttached

Village Infill Downtown Corridor

CentersOriented 37,500 37,500 13,000 120,000 52,000 120,000

10% 10% 3% 32% 14% 32%

Dispersed 111,000 111,000 100,000 40,000 12,000 6,000

29% 29% 26% 11% 3% 2%

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Long Island Visioning Initiative

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Long Island Visioning Initiative

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Long Island Visioning Initiative

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• Large Projected Growth to Metropolitan Area

• We Need to Grow Differently and Create New Transportation Capacity

• Public Support Will Dictate our Success

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Next Steps for the Region

• Coordinate with NYMTC, other MPOs, planning and transportation agencies

• Launch Long Island initiative

• Begin planning and develop partnerships in other parts of the region

• Complete scenario-testing model

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Potential Outcomes

• Political support for new growth strategies

• Greater consensus on the next generation of transportation investments

• Growth in regional centers and transit friendly development

• Conservation of region-shaping landscapes and

estuaries

• Affordable housing programs and strategies

• Governance and tax reforms