May 10, 2012
What?
Why?
PUBLIC INVOVLEMENT
Hokee Pokee FestivalHope Mills Opening Day Baseball EventDogwood Festival
Stakeholders MeetingMay 22 – East Hoke Middle School 6:30pmMay 23 – Hope Mills Recreation Center 6:30pm
Survey Summary
Close the survey June 30
65 Surveys
www.congestionplan.com
Please tell us which roadways needs to be improved (adding through lanes/turn lanes). Select your top three.
•US 401 – 20.5%
•Rockfish Road – 56.4%
•Camden Road – 48.7%
•Main Street (Hope Mills) – 87.2%
•Raeford Road – 25.6%
•Cliffdale Road – 7.7%
•Wayside Road – 7.7%
Other roadways that need changes•Trade St• Legion Rd try to be turning lanes all the way to Owens•Golfview Rd•Lakewood Rd•Rockfish Rd in Cumberland County•Something needs to be done about remaining 2 lane segment of Cliffdale Rd
Other Intersections•Rockfish Rd and Golfview Rd• Lakeview Rd and Main St
Please tell us which intersections needs to be improved to allow faster and/or safer traffic flow. Select your top three.
•Camden Road/N Main Street (Hope Mills) – 81%
•Main Street (Raeford/US 401) – 28.6%
•Raeford Road/Cliffdale Road – 9.5%
•Rockfish Road/Camden Road – 66.7%
•US 401/Cliffdale Road – 14.3%
•Dundle Road/Stoney Point Road – 23.8%
How often do you walk or bike now?Daily Once to Twice
WeeklyA Few Times a Month
Never
Walking for Exercise/Recreation?
13.5% 45.9% 21.6% 18.9%
Walking as Transportation
(work, shopping,visiting)?
6.7% 16.7% 20.0% 56.7%
Bicycling or Exercise/Recreation?
3.4% 24.1% 27.6% 44.8%
Bicycling as Transportation
(work, shopping, visiting)?
0% 6.3% 3.1% 84.8%
Daily Once to Twice Weekly
A Few Times a Month
Never
Walking for Exercise/Recreation?
48.6% 45.7% 2.9% 0.0%
Walking as Transportation
(work, shopping,visiting)?
27.6% 17.2% 13.8% 37.9%
Bicycling or Exercise/Recreation?
22.6% 45.2% 19.4% 9.7%
Bicycling as Transportation
(work, shopping, visiting)?
14.3% 17.9% 10.7% 7.1%
How often you would like to do the following?
Roadways that need pedestrian and bicycle changes
•Camden Rd•Rockfish Rd•Golfview Rd•Hope Mills Rd•Main St (Hope Mills)•Raeford Rd•Hwy 301•Cliffdale Rd•Stoney Point Rd
Split the study area into four sections and asked what changes were needed in each.
LAND USE
LAND USEWe Need More Leave As Is Too Much Already
Shopping 61.9% 33.3% 4.8%
Offices 42.9% 57.1% 0%
Single Family Homes (1/2 acre or less)
23.8% 66.7% 9.5%
Single Family Homes (1 acre or more)
23.8% 66.7% 4.8%
Apartments/Town Homes
42.9% 47.6% 9.5%
Medical Area 75% 25% 0%
Farmland 38.1% 57.1% 4.8%
Park/Open Space 65.2% 34.8% 0%
Section 1
LAND USEWe Need More Leave As Is Too Much Already
Shopping 38.9% 44.8% 16.7%
Offices 38.9% 50% 11.1%
Single Family Homes (1/2 acre or less)
36.8% 42.1% 21.1%
Single Family Homes (1 acre or more)
31.6% 42.1% 21.1%
Apartments/Town Homes
50% 35% 15%
Medical Area 50% 45% 5%
Farmland 30% 65% 5%
Park/Open Space 55% 45% 0%
Section 2
LAND USEWe Need More Leave As Is Too Much Already
Shopping 47.4% 36.8% 15.8%
Offices 26.3% 57.9% 15.8%
Single Family Homes (1/2 acre or less)
31.6% 52.6% 15.8%
Single Family Homes (1 acre or more)
40% 45% 15%
Apartments/Town Homes
42.1% 36.8% 21.1%
Medical Area 50% 40% 1.6%
Farmland 25% 65% 10%
Park/Open Space 57.9% 36.8% 5.3%
Section 3
LAND USEWe Need More Leave As Is Too Much Already
Shopping 51.9% 29.6% 18.5%
Offices 29.6% 55.6% 14.8%
Single Family Homes (1/2 acre or less)
36% 40% 24%
Single Family Homes (1 acre or more)
50% 33.3% 16.7%
Apartments/Town Homes
48.1% 33.3% 18.5%
Medical Area 67.9% 28.6% 3.6%
Farmland 24% 68% 8%
Park/Open Space 70% 26.7% 3.3%
Section 4
Other Land Use Responses•Way too many low income areas are concentrated making crime rates in the city inflate and gang activity rise. Breaking these areas up will help crime. Look at what New Haven, CT did with it's ghetto's as an example of good planning.•Need better roads and services•There seems to be to much development on the periphery; development needs to occur in urbanized areas.•Need more stores; another Wal-Mart out closer to 301•Neighborhoods should be connected/interconnected so that neighbors do not need to leave one neighborhood to get to another. "Deep" development is needed to prevent Bragg Blvd-type development.•Land use needs to be higher density. Strip commercial with each their own points of access is out of control. There are loads of derelict lots in this study area that need to be reused or held to a certain condition standard.•Less government housing in area 4
Policy DirectionsThe place we are at now with our policies, and future directions
Why are Policies Important?• Over time, policies – not individual infrastructure
projects – tend to have the greatest influence on how a place develops, and if it develops the way we envision it
• By having an understanding of the diversity and limitations of our current policies, we can compare them against our future recommendations and suggest adjustments to the policies we have now
Policies – Regional and LocalLocal Policies• Land Use Plans• Cumberland County 2030
Growth Vision Plan• Southwest Cumberland
County Land Use Plan• Transportation Plans (incl.
NCDOT-driven plans)• Development & Subdivision
Ordinance Language• Site Review Practices
Regional and State Policies• Sustainable Sandhills• NCDOT Complete Streets
and Design Standards• Fort Bragg (Joint Land Use
Study Update & Long-Range Master Plan)
• BRAC Regional Task Force Tabletop Exercise
NCDOT Complete Streets Planning & Design Guidelines (1.20.2012)
How to Summarize and Evaluate Policies?1. Text Summary2. Evaluation Matrix > to Provide
an Independent Review of Supporting Policies
3. Establish Policy Directions Indicated by the Review
Leading to Recommendations:4. Menu of Policy Options5. Specific Cases as Examples6. NOT Re-Writing Ordinances!
Principles factors influencing transportation Conviction Hoke Raeford CumberlandHope MillsFayetteville Ft BraggSted/Lin/WadeSpring Lake
Guiding adequate design for circulation 1.67 3 2 1 2 1 1 2 2Road Hierarchy connectivity index /circulation 1.50 1 1 2 3 1 1 2 3Road Hierarchy graduated land uses for road types 2.00 2 3 1 1 1 4 3 2Road Hierarchy continuity with adjouning streets 2.33 2 3 4 3 1 1 2 2Road Hierarchy discourage cut thru traffi c 2.83 5 4 2 2 2 2 3 2Road Hierarchy alleys 3.00 5 3 3 2 1 4 3 3Overlay highway access control corridor 2.67 1 4 4 4 1 2 4 4Road Hierarchy marginal access streets (frontage) 3.00 2 4 2 4 2 4 4 2Guiding reduce congestion 2.83 3 2 2 4 3 3 4 4Guiding setbacks and buffers 1.17 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2Multimodal open space access provision 1.33 1 3 1 1 1 1 1 4Safety corner radius 2.00 4 4 1 1 1 1 4 1Road Hierarchy maximum block size 2.33 1 4 1 3 1 4 4 1Safety sight clearance 2.00 1 2 4 3 1 1 3 4Overlay Airport / Flightpath 2.00 2 4 3 1 1 1 4 4Overlay Military Small Area / Buffer Plans 2.33 3 3 2 4 1 1 3 4Guiding preserve rural character 2.17 1 3 2 3 1 3 3 5Guiding preserve natural areas/open space 2.67 3 3 3 3 3 1 3 3Safety right angle intersections 1.33 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1Safety built to NCDOT standards 1.67 2 1 2 2 1 2 1 1Safety street off-sets 1.83 2 3 1 3 1 1 1 1Multimodal mixed comm/residential land use 2.50 1 3 3 3 1 4 3 3Guiding nodal development 2.33 2 3 1 4 2 2 4 4Multimodal pedestrian oriented environment 2.33 3 3 2 4 1 1 4 4Safety protect bike & ped from vehicle 3.17 4 4 3 4 2 2 4 4Guiding avoid STRIP development 3.33 1 4 2 5 4 4 4 5Multimodal parking as a tool 3.33 5 4 4 4 1 2 4 5Multimodal sidewalks 1.00 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3Road Hierarchy cul-de-sac limitations 1.83 1 1 3 1 1 4 1 1Multimodal bicycling pathways 2.67 2 3 3 4 2 2 3 2Multimodal rear parking 2.83 2 4 4 2 1 4 4 4Multimodal Transit 3.50 4 5 4 5 2 1 5 5Guiding conformity to adopted plans 2.50 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 3Guiding economy 2.50 2 1 2 4 3 3 3 4Guiding protect Military operations 2.33 2 3 2 4 2 1 4 4Overlay Gateway locations 3.50 3 5 4 5 3 1 5 5
We’ll Provide This to You Later
– Don’t Get Eyestrain Trying to Read It Now!
DRAFT
Policy Directions – It’s About Respect• Respect a contextual design for street hierarchy
o Support NCDOT’s ‘Complete Streets’ design flexibilityo Respect Rural v. Urban aesthetics found throughout the study area o Codify the vision through (for example) form-based planning standards
and overlayso Adopt technology such as intelligent transportation systems
• Respect this symbiotic relationship between land use and transportationo Allow for roadway expansion through appropriate building setbackso Support alternative transportation modes in designo Take more responsibility for managing roadway accesso Connections mean better access and better trip distribution for local
trips• Respect the importance of economic viability
o Respect existing property valueso Grow the tax base while preserving community charactero Capitalize on – and preserve – historic/cultural/scenic featureso Preservation of open space and local farming
Photo: Spacing.Ca
So…How Do Policies Influence Us Now?• Think About Policy Directions Into Consideration when
Developing the Land Use/Transportation Typologies in the Next Exercise
• Continue to “Feed Us” Directions as We Progress Based on the Real-World Problems and Concerns You Have as Professionals, Citizens, and Officials
• Remember: An Output of this Plan is NOT Going to be Changes to Ordinances or Plans, but Instead Make Specific Recommendations and Provide Examples to Show How to Achieve Preferred Transportation Options – Use Us and this Project as a Resource to You and Your Community!
Mapping a Better OutcomeCreating a Community without Covering Old Ground
Not Starting from a Blank Slate – and We’re Not All the Same, EitherTypically, area planning efforts start with overarching goals to help guide the course of the study and its recommendations. Next, we would develop many scenarios to define directions for the study area, and refine them based on our initial interpretation of study goals.
This approach does not lend itself well to this particular study because:1. Towns and Counties already have
adopted visions, goals, and objectives
2. The study area is very diverse and complex, and does not lend itself well to generic goals
3. When generic goals are used, generic outcomes almost always result: “the lowest common denominator”
Vision Goals Objectives Scenarios TestingCost,
Validate & Revise
Turning the Process on its HeadUse our knowledge of our own communities to create the best possible conservation areas, suburbs, towns, cities, downtowns, and other “building blocks,” creating a menu of land use/transportation typologies that we can apply to different parts of our diverse region, comparing them to trend and planned scenarios. Along the way, we’ll identify ways of enhancing the recommendations and barriers to implementation that will become part of the implementation strategy.
Create “Building Blocks”
Analyze
Apply to Study Area
Implement
Going Forward From Where We Are
Instead of starting from scratch, let’s treat our towns, countryside, cities, suburbs, and downtown cores as uniquely as possible.
– Step 1 (Today). Identify the street typologies, land uses, and design issues and goals for several transects.
– Step 2 (Next Meeting). Assign the typologies to unique geographies throughout our study area.
– Step 3. (Later) Assess and revise the typologies applied in Steps 2 and 3 based on assessment of outcomes.
– Step 4. (Still Later) Review cost estimates, assess with the public, and finalize recommendations.
Step
1.
Describe our land use types and characteristics of streets. Note issues and barriers for each type of use. St
ep 2
.
Apply typologies to individual grid cells across the study area.
Step
3.
Assess and revise the typologies based on technical assessment of impacts and outcomes St
ep 4
.
Vet with the public, finalize cost estimates and prepare implementation guidance
A B C
A AA
AA
BB
B BC
CC C
BCA
AA
BA
B AC
CA C
Building BlocksFor each land use that you think is important to promote and “do right” in the study area, create a typology, or “building block.”
Each typology consists of both transportation and land use elements – although not every possible element is shown. Use the check boxes to quickly identify the types of transportation infrastructure and land use characteristics that belong in each typology.
Second, discuss how each transportation and / or land use could be made better (Objectives & Enhancements) and the threats to getting each land use type to be the best it can be (Issues & Barriers).
Note: There may be more than one set of characteristics for each typology (more than one rural condition, more than one suburban condition, etc.)
Transitioning
Sidewalks both sides!
Street connectivity is poor in many places
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