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Agenda - Planning Commission - 12/04/2014
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Agenda - Planning Commission - 12/04/2014
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3/21/2025 10:21:44 AM
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Meetings
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Agenda
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Planning Commission
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12/04/2014
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Strategies to Improve Communities <br />Creating Livable <br />Communities <br />The Many Faces of "Livability" <br />Most leaders charged with running local <br />governments seek to create "livable communities." <br />However, the phrase has been used to cover so much <br />territory that it no longer is clear what anyone really <br />means by it. For the literal minded, a livable place is, <br />redundantly, where people reside and, if a place <br />were not livable, it would be empty, save for passers- <br />by — including those who arrive temporarily for <br />commerce. However, by livable, most people mean <br />something symbolic. The phrase "livable <br />community" evokes a place that is not simply <br />habitable but that is desirable. It is not only where <br />people do live, but where they want to live. <br />Awards are given for the most livable places in <br />America and the winners are chosen, often by <br />magazines, based on many quality of life criteria like <br />safety, affordability and beauty. Because livability <br />means so many things to different people, <br />researchers and community organizations <br />have explored just about every window into <br />the meaning of the term. For some, livability <br />has to do with the built environment — a <br />place that hews to land conservation, avoids <br />sprawl and funnels activity into pedestrian - <br />friendly space with low rise buildings and <br />attractive greenery (Kunstler, 1993). Proper <br />land use in a livable place results in the <br />"spirit of community," (Fischer, 2000) <br />where neighbors trust and rely on each <br />other and turn to each other for help. One <br />organization reminds us that livability <br />should not be the aspiration of only well off <br />communities: "livability extends to economic <br />dynamism and career opportunities as well as <br />recreational, aesthetic, cross -generational and <br />cultural activities." (Community Research <br />Connections in httn: / /crcresearch.org/case- <br />studies/case-studies-sustainable- <br />infrastructure/land-use-planning /what -makes -a - <br />city -liveable). <br />A livable community not only attracts people <br />because its infrastructure represents good planning <br />principles, it may also provide expansive <br />opportunities like those of great cities. One simple <br />characteristic of a great city that intersects with <br />livable communities is the creation of a place where <br />people want to spend time outside <br />(httn: / /ecolocalizer.com / 2000 /07/08 /what-is-a- <br />good-citv/). A more elaborate set of amenities comes <br />from the mid -twentieth century, when Lewis <br />Mumford described this way what exceptional cities <br />provide: "The chief function of the city is to convert <br />power into form, energy into culture, dead matter <br />into the living symbols of art, biological reproduction <br />into social creativity." This is a tall order but one that <br />some believe would contribute to a city becoming <br />"livable." <br />Below is a word cloud of definitions of livability that <br />came from 18 articles reviewed by the National <br />Association of Regional Networks (NARC).1 It <br />demonstrates the salience of Transportation and <br />Community Quality as well as the diversity of other <br />terms used to describe "livability." <br />Figure 1: Livability Word Cloud <br />86@ERS" <br />zw <br />COMMUNITY <br />IT <br />rgl oawrx -.. ECONOMIC LOCATION FACILITIES <br />114,ENTRONMENTP AFFORIIABLER <br />PO,Lr LICEPLANNiN I:IF,E <br />r 5a PfAPLI.HESLTH ceuics '. <br />iticLI LOCAL <br />FABLE ENITI ra�x INT �3aor ruate4 A.$ <br />UIVESTMENYS • ' C <br />ENHINCE"1°"" <br />' Livability Word Cloud Including Scholarly and Practitioner Definitions <br />(www.wordle.net) in LIVABILITY LITERATURE REVIEW: A SYNTHESIS OF <br />CURRENT PRACTICE. National Association of Regional Councils and U.S. <br />Department of Transportation 2012, Washington, D.C. <br />© 2014, National Research Center, Inc. Page 4 <br />
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