An Introduction to New Urbanism in Florida
by Dr. David Brain
A quick glance at the New Urban News is enough to tell you that Florida
holds a significant place on the leading edge of the New Urbanism,
and has done so from a time well before the movement had a name or
a charter. At most recent count, Rob Steuteville, the editor of New
Urban News, reports that there are 29 projects of at least neighborhood-scale
(15 acres or more) under construction, and a total of 48 New Urbanist
projects in the pipeline. This list does not include smaller infill
or redevelopment efforts, or the many planning efforts oriented toward
existing towns, or the remaking of landscapes currently falling prey
to sprawl; efforts being undertaken by counties, cities, small towns,
and neighborhoods across the state. Research undertaken for this guidebook
have identified up to some 66 New Urbanist projects in Florida, of
which 56 are included in this guidebook.
In her foreword to the Charter of the New Urbanism, Shelley Poticha
writes that what we now call “New Urbanism” is a movement
that “began as a remarkable set of conversations aimed at systematically
changing the ground rules for development in North America” (p.
1). It would be hard to overstate the importance of the strands of
these conversations that grew out of the example set by Robert Davis,
Andres Duany, and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk in the unlikely landscape
of the Florida Panhandle. It may be that the legacy of Seaside is,
in itself, enough to qualify Florida as “the state of the New
Urbanism” (to borrow the title of a conference held a few years
ago at the Seaside Institute). Seaside still stands as an extraordinary
exemplar, illustrating key principles of town planning and urban design,
but more importantly, demonstrating the possibility of re-activating
a process of traditional town-making with lessons relevant to bringing
the compelling quality, vitality, and complexity of traditional urbanism
to the making of a wide variety of contemporary places.
Florida’s contribution did not end with Seaside, however, or
even with Celebration, the other Florida project that has tended to
dominate both press coverage and popular perception of the movement.
If Florida has remained in the vanguard as the movement has grown,
it is because one can find projects representing the application of
New Urbanist ideas to the full range of problems identified in the
Charter of the New Urbanism, from neighborhood to region. A complete
list of projects in Florida could be taken as an encyclopedic guide
to the ways that New Urbanists are working on different kinds of problems
at different scales: from new towns to modest infill projects, from
revitalized downtowns to transformed malls, from regional plans of
impressive scope to small overlay districts, from projects bringing
new life to faltering small towns to projects repairing huge wounds
in the fabric of large cities, from upscale resorts to HOPE VI revitalizations
of public housing.
One of the drawbacks of the tendency to associate the New Urbanism
exclusively with a few of the more dramatic and photogenic projects
has been that popular discussion has emphasized the look and feel
of the traditional architecture, particular elements like front porches,
the association of the form of a small town with an earlier, simpler
time, or the supposed inauthenticity of a resort community built from
scratch. Such discussions have been misleading, to say the least.
Although the New Urbanism has often been associated with the simple
idea of reviving pre-war traditions in town building, it is clear
that in order to revive our ability to build livable communities and
re-create a culture of place-making, the New Urbanism has sparked
wide-ranging creativity and innovation throughout the whole matrix
of professions and institutions that have an impact on the way we
build. The movement has spurred changes in the professional practices
of architects, urban designers, planners, land developers, traffic
engineers, and other professions involved in shaping the built environment,
as well as significant changes in the construction industry, in land
development practices, in the standard practices of mortgage lenders
and other financial institutions, and in the regulatory efforts of
local, state, and federal governments. All of this is demonstrated
in the range of Florida projects, and the issues at stake are clearly
illustrated in the mix of successes and failures represented by each.
Why has Florida provided such a fertile ground for New Urbanist projects
of every sort? First, the New Urbanism has taken root most quickly
and deeply in those states, like Florida, which have experienced the
most dramatic growth and development pressures in the last two decades.
The pressures created by the growing population of residents have
been exacerbated by the simultaneous rapid growth of Florida tourism.
From 2.8 million people in 1950, Florida’s population reached
almost 16,000,000 residents in 2000, not including the estimated 49
million tourists who visit annually. Five of Florida’s cities
made the “top 20” list of cities threatened by urban sprawl.
In the period between 1990 and 1996, Orlando’s population grew
by 28%, but its land area grew by 68%. Pensacola’s land area
grew by 95% during the same period.1 It has been estimated that an
average of 450 acres of forest and 410 acres of farmland are lost
every day. The good news is that the stubbornly healthy market for
Florida real estate has produced a seemingly endless string of unusual
opportunities to create remarkable places—and to make a financial
success of it.
South Florida Population Projection (click for larger
graph)

Second, we need to recognize that Florida’s innovative growth
management efforts predate the emergence of the New Urbanism as a
movement. In 1971, Governor Reubin Askew asked John DeGrove, then
serving as director of the FAU-FIU Joint Center for Environmental
and Urban Problems, to help lead a diverse group of 150 people in
the form of the Governor’s Commission on Water Management in
South Florida. The group’s recommendations led directly to the
Environmental Land and Water Management Act, the Comprehensive Planning
Act (the first effort to do a state comprehensive plan), Chapter 259
(the beginning of the most ambitious environmentally endangered lands
program in the nation, and the predecessor to Preservation 2000),
and Chapter 373, which established the state’s system of
regional water management districts. In 1975, Florida passed the
Local Government
Comprehensive Planning Act, mandating that every city and county
in the state have a plan. These efforts established the foundations
for
comprehensive growth management, the protection of environmentally
sensitive lands, and land use planning at the state level, while
also developing mechanisms for coordinating state-level planning
with planning
at the regional and local levels.
From its inception, the Florida Department of Community Affairs
has explored new ways to link the coordinating capabilities of
the state
with local and regional initiatives, but it has also worked to
give real substance to citizen participation in the planning process
at every level. In addition, much of this work has been carried
on in
the context of the water management districts and the regional
planning
councils, with a scope that has often effectively linked the neighborhood
to the region in ways that would not be possible otherwise. In
1996, the legislature created the Sustainable Communities Demonstration
Project and Sustainable Communities Network, projects developed
under Jim Murley’s leadership but originating with the Governor’s
Commission for a Sustainable South Florida (formed in 1994 by Governor
Chiles, succeeded in 1999 by the Governor’s Commission for
the Everglades). This program was intended to allow and encourage
more
local control over growth, empowering communities to develop long-term
strategies addressing local problems, while generally supporting
six principles of sustainability: restore key ecosystems; create
quality
communities and jobs; achieve a cleaner, healthier environment;
limit urban sprawl; protect wildlife and natural areas; and advance
the
efficient use of land and other resources.
The sector planning initiative is another demonstration project
oriented toward planning for a sustainable Florida. This demonstration
project
was modeled after Orange County’s 38,000-acre Horizon West
plan and the Southeast Development Plan in the City of Orlando,
and it
is now part of the Growth Management Act. The Horizon West plan
combines an initial conceptual overlay with detailed specific
area plans and
specialized land development regulations, all to establish distinct
villages and neighborhoods which use public schools as community
focal points. The Southeast Development Plan is a 19,000-acre
area of greenfield
development near the Orlando International Airport. Both of these
plans are significant because they provide a model for cooperative
land planning that transcends the projects of any single developer,
but with the participation by multiple property owners and interests.
In general, Florida has seen an extraordinary array of public
initiatives over the past 30 years at the state, regional, county,
and local
levels. It is generally recognized that Florida’s innovative growth
management system has had mixed success, and that some mistakes have
been made. This is perhaps one of the most interesting ironies, and
a third reason for Florida’s place on the leading edge of
the New Urbanism. While Florida has struggled to develop tools
and institutions
for comprehensive growth management, some aspects of our environmental
regulation and growth management system have also inadvertently
helped to encourage sprawl and make traditional neighborhood development
more difficult to accomplish. At the same time, the laws and institutions
developed as a part of that system have created important mechanisms
and opportunities for the implementation of New Urbanist principles
at every scale. Both the statutes and the administrative rules
associated
with growth management have incorporated language encouraging
innovative planning aimed at controlling sprawl and encouraging
higher quality
development.
There is not room here to review the impact of New Urbanist thinking
on Florida planning in any detail, but perhaps a couple of examples
will suffice. The Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council has
played a significant role not only in shaping development in the
region,
but in the development of the use of the charrette as a tool for
public planning. Experimentation with “sector planning” has encouraged
regional efforts to govern the incorporation of new lands into urban
growth in a more controlled fashion, using the transfer of development
rights to protect rural lands and rural character while encouraging
more compact and mixed-use development. Hillsborough County has developed
a plan for transforming some of its worst landscapes of placeless
sprawl into a system of town centers, creating an unusual regional
framework for retrofitting conventional suburban development patterns
based on a system of transect-oriented “tiers.” In
a similar fashion, working within the existing legal and administrative
frameworks
provided by the state system, Sarasota County has been able to
develop a comprehensive regional plan that attends to the form
and quality
of development, to its performance as human habitat and as the
infrastructure of healthy communities, and not just to raw issues
of quantity or
density. Such plans give detailed attention to the way neighborhoods
function as the building blocks of a regional system, plugging
new development into the system in intelligent relationship to
the enhancement
of existing neighborhoods and the necessary preservation of natural
landscape.
The New Urbanism has played a central role in a continuing evolution
of tools and techniques of planning and growth management in Florida,
and its principles have become an indispensable part of the vocabulary
of planners, elected officials, and citizen activists. It seems
safe to say that no other state has had quite this combination of
challenges
and opportunities, often in direct contradiction, including conditions
that bring certain issues clearly to a head, obstacles to be overcome,
and opportunities for experiment and innovative response. We have
been lucky, of course, in the extensive community of talented practitioners,
visionary town founders, and advocates for change that has developed
in Florida over the years, including many talented and dedicated
designers, planners, citizens, and leaders who have responded to
the challenges
at hand.
We have also been lucky with respect to the presence of a number
of institutions that might be seen as part of the civic infrastructure
of the state. While Florida has provided ample opportunities for
developers
of all sorts, it also has a healthy stock of small towns with historic
qualities worth preserving but which have been increasingly threatened
by development pressures, both directly by conventional development
patterns and indirectly by the environmental impact of sprawl. These
towns have been greatly assisted in their efforts by preservation
programs like the Florida Main Street Program, which now includes
(according to the web site) 49 places in the state. This program
has not only played an important role in maintaining the appearance
and
economic viability of historic downtown business districts in small
towns around the state, but Main Street programs can be a crucial
step toward empowerment, enabling citizens not only to preserve
what they have but to demand something better than they would otherwise
likely get from developers. Main Street programs are both an important
tool and often the first step toward a more comprehensive effort
toward
livable and walkable communities.
Much of the receptiveness of Florida communities to New Urbanist
propositions has been the result of educational efforts. Public
charrettes and
New Urbanist projects themselves, of course, have provided a surprisingly
widespread and practical education around the state. The work
of the Treasure Coast Regional Planning Council stands out in
this
regard.
In addition, programs supported by the Florida Humanities Council
(e.g., the Speakers Bureau, the “Florida as Home” program,
seminars for teachers) have also helped to foster a sense of place
and an appreciation for the history and heritage of Florida’s
small towns. More specifically, the Seaside Institute has offered
an extensive program of seminars and conferences. In addition to training
seminars for practitioners, the Seaside Institute has organized forums
and symposia to address broader issues associated with the revival
of civic life and the rebuilding of a culture of place-making and
town building. Programs in recent years have included (to name only
a few): a conference on “Design as a Catalyst for Community,” a
seminar on faith-based communities, a conference on mixed-income
housing co-sponsored by the Urban Land Institute and the US Department
of
Housing and Urban Development, and even a program developed in
partnership with an historic African-American neighborhood in
Gainesville (supported
by the Florida Humanities Council).
Jonathan Barnett has noted that a key innovation of the New Urbanism
is “the recognition that design and planning concepts cannot
be separated from their implementation mechanisms” (Charter,
p. 9). In the diversity of Florida projects, one can see the full
range of approaches to implementation: the cash-strapped developer
with a vision, the major corporation with deep pockets and the ability
to make substantial and patiently long-term investment up front, the
non-profit foundation with an interest in the possibility of linking
its community-building mission to its investment portfolio, public
initiatives and public/private partnerships. One also sees the full
range of implementation techniques related to financing, designing,
marketing, creating the necessary legal documents, establishing a
supportive legal framework in the relevant jurisdictions, and even
building “community” once people begin to live in
a place.
A final reason for Florida’s place in the vanguard of the New
Urbanism is that it’s unique character as a sandy peninsula
of delicate and diversely beautiful natural habitats provides a constant
and vivid object lesson in the consequences of anything less than
the smartest possible growth. Florida demands an environmentalism
that goes beyond any simple sentimentality about the natural landscape.
Florida faces development pressures that pose a clear and immediate
threat to the livability of our communities—not only with respect
to the inconvenience of traffic congestion or the aesthetic inferiority
of conventional development patterns, but also at the level of the
most fundamental issues concerning the availability of drinkable water
and clean air. It has become painfully clear that the current patterns
of development are not sustainable, in the simplest sense that they
cannot continue. Behind the techniques of design that provide the
most visible face of New Urbanist practice, there is a deep sense
of responsibility concerning where and how we build, the way we relate
to the ecosystems on which we rely for drinkable water, breathable
air, and a sustainable future. New Urbanist practice, by enabling
citizens to take responsibility for the form and character of their
communities, holds the promise of new possibilities for a practical
environmentalism to become a routine part of the way humans occupy
the face of the earth. If we aren’t quite there yet, a study
of Florida cases is as good a way as any to get a clear sense of both “best
practices” and the work that remains to be done.
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