HomeMy WebLinkAboutReport - Mail Packet - 3/7/2017 - Information From Darin Atteberry Re: Tactical Urbanism Article From CnuPage 1 of 14
PUBLIC SQUARE
A temporary protected bike lane in Burlington, Vermont, created in a tactical project.
Source: Street Plans
RETROFIT
Great idea: Tactical urbanism
The latest trend in urban design and planning gets them off of the paper and out of a big
room, testing ideas in the real world. It is fun and hands-on, and making many converts.
ROBERT STEUTEVILLE FEB. 16, 2017
In celebration of the upcoming CNU 25.Seattle, Public Square is running the
series 25 Great Ideas of the New Urbanism. These ideas have been shaped by
new urbanists and continue to influence cities, towns, and suburbs. The
series is meant to inspire and challenge those working toward complete
communities in the next quarter century.
In between the planning and the realization of a complete community vision is
a stage of testing ideas in the real world, and that is what tactical urbanism is
all about. Temporary bicycle lanes and public spaces, traffic calming for a day
or a month, colorful crosswalks, turning parking lots into pop-up parks—such
activities are taking place across America, formalized by techniques and
March 2, 2017
TO: Mayor & City Councilmembers
FROM: Darin Atteberry
RE: Per 2/27 LPT discussion
/sek
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strategies called tactical urbanism. This concept gets planning off of the paper
and out of a big room and it is one of the most exciting trends in urban design
and transportation today.
Public Square editor Robert Steuteville interviews Anthony Garcia and Mike
Lydon, principals of Street Plans and co-authors of the book Tactical
Urbanism: Short-Term Action for Long-Term Change, to discuss the tactical
urbanism trend.
Mike Lydon and Anthony Garcia
Can you describe the connection between Tactical Urbanism and
New Urbanism and the difference between the two?
Lydon: Tactical urbanism is really a methodology for private implementation
and advancement within larger new urbanist projects. Tactical urbanism is a
way of thinking and doing this that's been around for a very long time. Early
examples can be found at Seaside, where temporary buildings, markets, and
public spaces were used to drive interest and vitality. It’s an opportunity for
people to engage in change-making that is critical to the success of our longer-
term project. So I'd say it's a tool. It's a part of New Urbanism, always has
been, and should remain that way moving forward.
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Garcia: I think the big difference is that with Tactical Urbanism, you're really
looking to build something—it brings the ideas that we put down on paper to
life. It springs from the idea that walkable, compact communities are what we
should be doing, and how do we get back to that goal? Tactical urbanism
short-circuits the normal process of the charrette and builds on it in a way that
is not obvious to most people who are not new urbanists—but the whole idea
of “test before you invest” is analogous to a charrette, it's analogous to doing
sketches after sketches on a site to try to get to some sort of a solution. That’s
what urban designer Victor Dover calls, "Propose and dispose." The charrette
is all about hashing out those ideas on paper. And our work just takes it
another step further and says, "Why stop at the paper? Why stop at the
rendering? Let's just build the thing and see if it works."
You talk about this as having a history, but nobody really identified
it as a specific concept 50 years ago or 100 years ago. Why has it
come into the lexicon now?
Lydon: A lot of these ideas have just been isolated in their application. It's
powerful to take an idea to fruition very quickly, and whether it fails or
succeeds, just the notion of doing it, for some reason, seems radical or strange
or not the way that projects are normally developed. There's a lot of examples
of activating streets or spaces or people doing things without permission and
those things leading to sustained and sanctioned change at the policy level, or
through physical projects. There’s a fascinating history of this as a form of
protest in the ‘60s and early ‘70s. For us, writing this book a few years ago, it
was really important that we pay attention to that, and give credence to the
fact that this isn't new. But this term, in bringing all these disparate projects
together that more or less use the same line of thinking perhaps is the new
element here. And you see it today as a matter of necessity in developing cities
in developing nations. You see it in favelas, or in just normal city
neighborhoods, a lot more of this reclamation of space, and making good use
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of what you have on hand, and trying things out, and a lot of low-risk, small-
scale projects and enterprises that, when successful, make a lasting impact.
Garcia: And they arguably don't call themselves tactical urbanists. The
favelas—that's just the way that they do it. We branded it, but the reason that
you don't see any mention of it throughout history is for the same reason you
don't see New Urbanism mentioned. It's just the way things were done. And
there was no reason to call it out as being different, but now there is.
Why do you think the concept has resonated in cities and towns
throughout the United States and abroad?
Lydon: People are tired of conventional planning process. There's only so
many public meetings that folks want to go to. And this puts the action
squarely into the hands of folks—city people, city employees, and city leaders,
and citizens. And that's the powerful framework that’s inherently about doing
as opposed to talking about or planning doing something. It's very action-
oriented, it's low cost. For the most part, it's extremely fun to go and change a
space with groups of people. That action approach has really brought a lot of
attention and excitement, and that's part of the appeal.
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Photo by Megan Sebeck
I was just at the charter awards jury, and there was a call for some
tactical projects, and a number of them deal with streets. Is there a
special reason why streets in particular are in need of tactical
urbanism?
Garcia: There's two reasons that streets are easier for us to do. Like I was just
mentioning, a building is a more complex thing. The larger-scale items are just
harder. But street interventions are a lot more accessible, and it's a place that
we all feel comfortable with as new urbanists. A street is easy to retrofit. But
the sad part is that we need to retrofit them because our streets have been so
horribly designed, and continue to be horribly designed, up to today. And I
think that's one thing that we as new urbanists have learned, the buildings can
only do so much. They can only carry a certain part of the load, but what
happens between the buildings is just as important. And we're losing that
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battle. So people see that as being the front line, and that's why we see a lot
more projects on streets.
Lydon: There's an ownership level here, right? We can eventually get
permission or claim that we have ownership over the streets as taxpayers, to
work with them, and buildings and lots are private space. So if you have a
willing property owner, it’s very easy. But we can also do blocks and blocks of
public right of way by working with cities. And as Tony mentioned, it's public
realm that has been so lacking in the American city in the last several decades
and for all the reasons new urbanists highlight. And to fix the street is
absolutely primary to our work.
What are some of the more successful and/or innovative tactical
urbanism projects that are going on right now?
Garcia: A project that's going on right now that is pretty innovative is
Biscayne Green. This is a highway median that goes right into downtown and
the median is a series of parking lots. So the Downtown Development
Authority got a grant from the Knight Foundation to convert two of the
parking lots into public space. The innovative aspect is that we reconfigured
Biscayne Boulevard, which is our main street here in South Florida, right on
the bay, to allow on-street parking. As part of that exercise, we also negotiated
with FDOT (Florida Department of Transportation) to paint crosswalks with
an artistic design, something that they had not allowed anywhere in the state
of Florida up until this point so this experiment is not just a Pavement to
Parks project, it's got a crosswalk component. It's got a dedicated bus lane
component. So it's all of these tactical projects mashed together in an
ensemble. When you put it all together like this, it's a pretty massive
undertaking and it's starting to scale up in the way that we have envisioned.
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A pop-up park on a parking lot in Biscayne Boulevard. Source: Street Plans
Lydon: We just finished a project in northwest Arkansas, where our charge
was to work with three cities—a nonprofit was our client along with the
Walton Family Foundation—and our task was to come up with pop-up bike
lanes that would last for one month. That's also interesting because we haven't
really seen many interventions that last for that amount of time. The fun thing
was that our municipal government partners, at least at the Municipal
Planning Organization level, were skeptical at first and not really accustomed
to this whole idea. Now I would say Tim Conklin, our client, is one of the best
tactical urbanists that we know. He gets it and that change happened in front
of us.
What was so convincing in what you did with the government
partners that changed their minds?
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Garcia: It wasn't what we did. It was what he did because he got his hands
dirty. Michael, tell the story.
Lydon: Well, first of all, just to zoom out quickly to have context on the
project. The point was to create three protected bike lanes radiating off of a
trail network. They built a 35-mile world class trail network through
northwest Arkansas. But the problem is they had no on-street connectivity to
the trail through the downtown, so the charge was to build protected bike
lanes connecting major destinations to the trail, including downtown. The
moment the client has traffic tape in his hand, on his hands and knees, and is
putting it down on the asphalt with the mayor, he looks up and says, "Okay,
guys, this is pretty cool. I get it." That’s the ‘aha’ moment. There's something
powerful and fun and collaborative about actually doing a project together
physically that's very, very different than drawing something on paper or
being at a public meeting. The next step in this line of thinking is to actually
allow citizen groups, nonprofits, and city departments to do this as a right.
What we found in Burlington Vermont is that we can stitch these things
together to allow businesses and organizations to take this approach and start
implementation very early on in the process. So you're going from plan to
action, from paper to pavement very, very quickly. In Burlington there were
four demonstration projects on one weekend that got thousands of people
involved and built a lot of excitement. It provided a test case for a permit
program and policy that the city adopted and now allows organizations to
make tactical changes whether we're there or not. It's the local community
groups who go to the city and have a very clear process to get permission to do
a range of projects and interventions in public space and the street. That's the
very first time any community, any city that we know of in the United Sates,
has done that.
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A tactical event in Burlington, using part of the street. Source: Street Plans
Do you know if anybody's followed up and taken advantage of this
program?
Lydon: The first to step in was an organization called Local Motion. It is a
statewide advocacy group in Vermont, based in Burlington. Once we got the
policy adopted this past Fall, they went out and got a trailer full of materials so
they can drive around the city or the state and do all these pop-up
demonstration projects. So they've now assembled that and are starting to
drive around, but it's really going to be the spring and the summer when all
this gets rolled out. And we're just now finishing the master plan for the city of
Burlington. It's going to a formal approval process this winter.
What sort of materials do they have in the back of this trailer?
Lydon: It would be planter boxes, cones, traffic tape, the tools for
implementing—so things like scissors, paint, paint brushes, wood—that can be
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configured into different things. This whole kit of materials will always be
evolving depending on what the project calls for.
Let me ask you about two things that I think are absolutely critical.
The first is testing. You're doing this for a short period of time.
How important is the concept of testing and getting numbers
before, during, and after to prove any particular concept?
Lydon: It's critical because it helps you build a story, build a case with the
community to accept and engage in a project. And then you really demonstrate
success through real pictures of people using space, numbers of users, public
reviews, comparison of crashes, or whatever the metric might be.
Garcia: Just having built the thing is a test. That is a proof of concept. A
rendering in real time.
The other thing I wanted to ask you about is liability. I'm sure you
get these questions all the time. There are concerns about changing
the street, changing the space. How important is liability and how
big of an issue is it?
Garcia: We try not to focus too much on the liability aspect because that's
part of what got us into this problem in the first place. Constant focus on
liability and who is going to get sued has led to our streets being designed by
the lowest common denominator.
Lydon: It is a concern fairly frequently, but it's a thing we can deal with pretty
expediently. When we are talking about changes to the right of way,
oftentimes we're doing things that are already done in materials that are
already used by Public Works Department or Department of the
Transportation. Things like cones and traffic tape are part of the normal
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language of construction projects. So we take those tools and we're just
remixing them and applying them for a different purpose, in terms of the
testing.
They're often willing to use their own liability to cover the project since it's
sanctioned. Where I think liability becomes a concern is in the unsanctioned
projects that don't have permission from the city. Those things might be done
in a guerilla fashion. And if you're doing something in the middle of the night,
without permission from the engineers, then you need to be able to accept that
liability. The great irony is that the vast majority of projects are actually using
geometries and designs that inherently make streets safer. So this is why
you've never seen anybody get hurt in a major way, or killed, on our streets
project during hundreds and hundreds if not thousands of pilots and
demonstration projects of tactical urbanism around the globe.
What differentiates the communities that are using tactical
urbanism and those that aren't? Can you tell me what is triggering
this in some places and not in others?
Garcia: There's usually an organized group of people who are interested—
ideally, it's inside city hall and outside where there is some education or some
advocacy group. When you got those two forces together, it's a very, very
powerful tool because there's political cover coming from both ends. Those
communities tend to be a little more educated, higher income possibly. One of
the challenges with this idea is that volunteers need free time to make these
projects happen. So there's an unspoken prerequisite that you need to have
the capacity of an engaged community. Now that being said, of course there's
been lots of projects where that isn't necessarily the case. You see a lot of
communities that are underserved, under-resourced, using this as a means of
getting things done at low cost to create momentum and progress in
overlooked places of the city. And I think that's where we want to spend a little
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bit more of our energy and time in focusing on how this tool is used within
those places. It can be a great way to attract political attention and capital to
move ideas.
It’s often a city location, an urban location, where the tactical
urbanism is applied. Are you seeing this in the suburbs very much?
Lydon: We've worked in suburban locations. The reason why I think we see it
more in an urban setting is an issue of scale. You don't have the urban
armature to frame the public realm, so the project becomes harder to
instigate. We've worked on those and quite frankly, they're just harder to be
successful because you just don't get the sense of a human scale as easily.
But yet they probably need it even more.
Garcia: I would agree. Where tactical urbanism and New Urbanism meet is
in the action that you take on the ground as a way to inform the policy and the
zoning and the regulatory side that actually empowers the water colors and
the renderings to become real. So if you're taking a large vacant site and you're
activating it, then you're showing demand and interest and the viability of
concepts. It's a tool that can show property owners, businesses, city leaders
this stuff is actually doable and viable.
I heard this week that a pervasive engineering mentality is the
biggest problem in America related to the built environment. Are
you seeing tactical urbanism being accepted and applied by
departments of transportation?
Lydon: Slowly. I mean the ideas became a lot more accepted generally with
progressive engineering departments, DOTs, and public works. You see it in
the big cities, for sure. It's a career-long fight that we're engaged in. But we've
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seen the Institute for Transportation Engineers write articles about tactical
urbanism. We're seeing more and more cities adopt the NACTO Street Design
Guide as their standard. We’re seeing it happen a lot with generational shifts.
Many of the clients that we have are people who are our age, like the young
directors of transportation in cities like New Haven. It's going to take time to
filter its way up to the top of these departments, and to change the standards
on the ground. And that's something that I credit new urbanists traffic
engineers for pushing and making happen since 35 years ago.
Looking toward the next decade, what is the role of tactical
urbanism and where and how can it be most effective?
Garcia: I think starting to infiltrate the public works departments. That's
where we want to take our tactical urbanism fight. I think that having city staff
buy into this idea is critically important, just like having city planning staff buy
into New Urbanism was critically important to that rise and that change over
the past 20 years.
Lydon: That's one of the biggest reasons why we wrote the Tactical
Urbanists' Guide to Materials in December, which was funded by the Knight
Foundation. We wrote into that grant a series of workshops specifically where
the engineers had to come to the table with the planners and the advocates.
The idea is we want all these people in the same room doing a workshop
around a problem site where tactical urbanism could be applied. We only
selected cities that had their ducks in a row to move forward. They can get
comfortable with the fact that they can do a lot more through this approach.
The application's much wider than street safety, but that's kind of the reason
for the guide creation and setting it within public works and the departments
of transportation around the country. And we look at three different time
intervals in that guide. We're looking at the materials and the design
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considerations for short-term, one-day to seven-day projects, medium-term
projects of a month to a year, and projects that last one year to five years.
Is there anything else that you'd like to add?
Garcia: For our audience, I want to make sure there's a connection that we
talked about early on that this is a movement by new urbanists. It's got its
different approaches and audiences but I think it's born from this larger
movement that we trained under. We think that's a really powerful addition to
the new urbanist toolkit. And something that might get lost in the whole
tactical urbanism discussion is there’s a plan that backs up what you're doing.
We differentiate guerilla urbanism from tactical urbanism by the plan.
Lydon: It's so important people understand that the best projects are those
that are tied to the feasibility of doing something in the long term. If you're not
tying the one day project to the long-term investment then it's not tactical. It's
not achieving a larger outcome.
Note: CNU intern Benjamin Crowther helped to produce this interview and
article.
Robert Steuteville is editor of Public Square: A CNU Journal and senior communications
adviser for the Congress for the New Urbanism.