4 ways to make a city more walkable | Jeff Speck

1,117,136 views ・ 2017-03-02

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:12
So I'm here to talk to you about the walkable city.
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What is the walkable city?
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Well, for want of a better definition,
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it's a city in which the car is an optional instrument of freedom,
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rather than a prosthetic device.
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And I'd like to talk about why we need the walkable city,
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and I'd like to talk about how to do the walkable city.
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Most of the talks I give these days are about why we need it,
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but you guys are smart.
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And also I gave that talk exactly a month ago,
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and you can see it at TED.com.
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So today I want to talk about how to do it.
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In a lot of time thinking about this,
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I've come up with what I call the general theory of walkability.
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A bit of a pretentious term, it's a little tongue-in-cheek,
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but it's something I've thought about for a long time,
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and I'd like to share what I think I've figured out.
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In the American city, the typical American city --
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the typical American city is not Washington, DC,
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or New York, or San Francisco;
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it's Grand Rapids or Cedar Rapids or Memphis --
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in the typical American city in which most people own cars
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and the temptation is to drive them all the time,
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if you're going to get them to walk, then you have to offer a walk
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that's as good as a drive or better.
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What does that mean?
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It means you need to offer four things simultaneously:
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there needs to be a proper reason to walk,
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the walk has to be safe and feel safe,
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the walk has to be comfortable
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and the walk has to be interesting.
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You need to do all four of these things simultaneously,
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and that's the structure of my talk today,
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to take you through each of those.
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The reason to walk is a story I learned from my mentors,
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Andrés Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk,
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the founders of the New Urbanism movement.
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And I should say half the slides and half of my talk today
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I learned from them.
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It's the story of planning,
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the story of the formation of the planning profession.
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When in the 19th century people were choking
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from the soot of the dark, satanic mills,
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the planners said, hey, let's move the housing away from the mills.
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And lifespans increased immediately, dramatically,
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and we like to say
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the planners have been trying to repeat that experience ever since.
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So there's the onset of what we call Euclidean zoning,
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the separation of the landscape into large areas of single use.
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And typically when I arrive in a city to do a plan,
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a plan like this already awaits me on the property that I'm looking at.
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And all a plan like this guarantees
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is that you will not have a walkable city,
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because nothing is located near anything else.
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The alternative, of course, is our most walkable city,
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and I like to say, you know, this is a Rothko,
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and this is a Seurat.
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It's just a different way -- he was the pointilist --
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it's a different way of making places.
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And even this map of Manhattan is a bit misleading
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because the red color is uses that are mixed vertically.
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So this is the big story of the New Urbanists --
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to acknowledge that there are only two ways
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that have been tested by the thousands
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to build communities, in the world and throughout history.
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One is the traditional neighborhood.
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You see here several neighborhoods of Newburyport, Massachusetts,
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which is defined as being compact and being diverse --
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places to live, work, shop, recreate, get educated --
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all within walking distance.
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And it's defined as being walkable.
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There are lots of small streets.
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Each one is comfortable to walk on.
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And we contrast that to the other way,
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an invention that happened after the Second World War,
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suburban sprawl,
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clearly not compact, clearly not diverse, and it's not walkable,
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because so few of the streets connect,
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that those streets that do connect become overburdened,
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and you wouldn't let your kid out on them.
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And I want to thank Alex Maclean, the aerial photographer,
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for many of these beautiful pictures that I'm showing you today.
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So it's fun to break sprawl down into its constituent parts.
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It's so easy to understand,
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the places where you only live, the places where you only work,
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the places where you only shop,
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and our super-sized public institutions.
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Schools get bigger and bigger,
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and therefore, further and further from each other.
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And the ratio of the size of the parking lot
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to the size of the school
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tells you all you need to know,
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which is that no child has ever walked to this school,
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no child will ever walk to this school.
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The seniors and juniors are driving the freshmen and the sophomores,
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and of course we have the crash statistics to prove it.
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And then the super-sizing of our other civic institutions
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like playing fields --
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it's wonderful that Westin in the Ft. Lauderdale area
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has eight soccer fields and eight baseball diamonds
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and 20 tennis courts,
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but look at the road that takes you to that location,
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and would you let your child bike on it?
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And this is why we have the soccer mom now.
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When I was young, I had one soccer field,
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one baseball diamond and one tennis court,
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but I could walk to it, because it was in my neighborhood.
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Then the final part of sprawl that everyone forgot to count:
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if you're going to separate everything from everything else
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and reconnect it only with automotive infrastructure,
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then this is what your landscape begins to look like.
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The main message here is:
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if you want to have a walkable city, you can't start with the sprawl model.
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you need the bones of an urban model.
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This is the outcome of that form of design,
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as is this.
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And this is something that a lot of Americans want.
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But we have to understand it's a two-part American dream.
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If you're dreaming for this,
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you're also going to be dreaming of this, often to absurd extremes,
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when we build our landscape to accommodate cars first.
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And the experience of being in these places --
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(Laughter)
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This is not Photoshopped.
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Walter Kulash took this slide.
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It's in Panama City.
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This is a real place.
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And being a driver can be a bit of a nuisance,
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and being a pedestrian can be a bit of a nuisance
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in these places.
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This is a slide that epidemiologists have been showing for some time now,
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(Laughter)
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The fact that we have a society where you drive to the parking lot
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to take the escalator to the treadmill
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shows that we're doing something wrong.
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But we know how to do it better.
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Here are the two models contrasted.
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I show this slide,
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which has been a formative document of the New Urbanism now
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for almost 30 years,
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to show that sprawl and the traditional neighborhood contain the same things.
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It's just how big are they,
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how close are they to each other,
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how are they interspersed together
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and do you have a street network, rather than a cul-de-sac
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or a collector system of streets?
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So when we look at a downtown area,
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at a place that has a hope of being walkable,
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and mostly that's our downtowns in America's cities
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and towns and villages,
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we look at them and say we want the proper balance of uses.
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So what is missing or underrepresented?
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And again, in the typical American cities in which most Americans live,
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it is housing that is lacking.
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The jobs-to-housing balance is off.
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And you find that when you bring housing back,
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these other things start to come back too,
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and housing is usually first among those things.
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And, of course, the thing that shows up last and eventually
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is the schools,
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because the people have to move in,
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the young pioneers have to move in, get older, have kids
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and fight, and then the schools get pretty good eventually.
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The other part of this part,
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the useful city part,
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is transit,
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and you can have a perfectly walkable neighborhood without it.
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But perfectly walkable cities require transit,
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because if you don't have access to the whole city as a pedestrian,
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then you get a car,
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and if you get a car,
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the city begins to reshape itself around your needs,
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and the streets get wider and the parking lots get bigger
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and you no longer have a walkable city.
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So transit is essential.
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But every transit experience, every transit trip,
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begins or ends as a walk,
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and so we have to remember to build walkability around our transit stations.
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Next category, the biggest one, is the safe walk.
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It's what most walkability experts talk about.
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It is essential, but alone not enough to get people to walk.
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And there are so many moving parts that add up to a walkable city.
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The first is block size.
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This is Portland, Oregon,
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famously 200-foot blocks, famously walkable.
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This is Salt Lake City,
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famously 600-foot blocks,
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famously unwalkable.
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If you look at the two, it's almost like two different planets,
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but these places were both built by humans
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and in fact, the story is that when you have a 200-foot block city,
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you can have a two-lane city,
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or a two-to-four lane city,
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and a 600-foot block city is a six-lane city, and that's a problem.
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These are the crash statistics.
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When you double the block size --
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this was a study of 24 California cities --
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when you double the block size,
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you almost quadruple the number of fatal accidents
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on non-highway streets.
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So how many lanes do we have?
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This is where I'm going to tell you what I tell every audience I meet,
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which is to remind you about induced demand.
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Induced demand applies both to highways and to city streets.
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And induced demand tells us that when we widen the streets
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to accept the congestion that we're anticipating,
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or the additional trips that we're anticipating
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in congested systems, it is principally that congestion
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that is constraining demand,
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and so that the widening comes,
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and there are all of these latent trips that are ready to happen.
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People move further from work
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and make other choices about when they commute,
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and those lanes fill up very quickly with traffic,
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so we widen the street again, and they fill up again.
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And we've learned that in congested systems,
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we cannot satisfy the automobile.
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This is from Newsweek Magazine -- hardly an esoteric publication:
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"Today's engineers acknowledge
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that building new roads usually makes traffic worse."
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My response to reading this was, may I please meet some of these engineers,
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because these are not the ones that I --
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there are great exceptions that I'm working with now --
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but these are not the engineers one typically meets working in a city,
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where they say, "Oh, that road is too crowded, we need to add a lane."
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So you add a lane, and the traffic comes,
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and they say, "See, I told you we needed that lane."
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This applies both to highways and to city streets if they're congested.
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But the amazing thing about most American cities that I work in,
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the more typical cities,
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is that they have a lot of streets that are actually oversized
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for the congestion they're currently experiencing.
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This was the case in Oklahoma City,
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when the mayor came running to me, very upset,
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because they were named in Prevention Magazine
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the worst city for pedestrians in the entire country.
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Now that can't possibly be true,
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but it certainly is enough to make a mayor do something about it.
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We did a walkability study,
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and what we found, looking at the car counts on the street --
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these are 3,000-, 4,000-, 7,000-car counts
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and we know that two lanes can handle 10,000 cars per day.
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Look at these numbers -- they're all near or under 10,000 cars,
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and these were the streets that were designated
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in the new downtown plan
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to be four lanes to six lanes wide.
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So you had a fundamental disconnect between the number of lanes
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and the number of cars that wanted to use them.
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So it was my job to redesign every street in the downtown
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from curb face to curb face,
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and we did it for 50 blocks of streets,
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and we're rebuilding it now.
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So a typical oversized street to nowhere
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is being narrowed, and now under construction,
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and the project is half done.
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The typical street like this, you know,
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when you do that, you find room for medians.
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You find room for bike lanes.
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We've doubled the amount of on-street parking.
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We've added a full bike network where one didn't exist before.
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But not everyone has the money that Oklahoma City has,
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because they have an extraction economy that's doing quite well.
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The typical city is more like Cedar Rapids,
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where they have an all four-lane system, half one-way system.
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And it's a little hard to see,
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but what we've done -- what we're doing; it's in process right now,
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it's in engineering right now --
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is turning an all four-lane system, half one-way
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into an all two-lane system, all two-way,
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and in so doing, we're adding 70 percent more on-street parking,
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which the merchants love,
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and it protects the sidewalk.
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That parking makes the sidewalk safe,
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and we're adding a much more robust bicycle network.
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Then the lanes themselves. How wide are they?
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That's really important.
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The standards have changed such that, as Andrés Duany says,
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the typical road to a subdivision in America
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allows you to see the curvature of the Earth.
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(Laughter)
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This is a subdivision outside of Washington from the 1960s.
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Look very carefully at the width of the streets.
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This is a subdivision from the 1980s.
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1960s, 1980s.
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The standards have changed to such a degree
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that my old neighborhood of South Beach,
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when it was time to fix the street that wasn't draining properly,
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they had to widen it and take away half our sidewalk,
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because the standards were wider.
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People go faster on wider streets.
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People know this.
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The engineers deny it, but the citizens know it,
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so that in Birmingham, Michigan, they fight for narrower streets.
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Portland, Oregon, famously walkable,
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instituted its "Skinny Streets" program in its residential neighborhood.
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We know that skinny streets are safer.
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The developer Vince Graham, in his project I'On,
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which we worked on in South Carolina,
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he goes to conferences and he shows his amazing 22-foot roads.
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These are two-way roads, very narrow rights of way,
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and he shows this well-known philosopher,
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who said, "Broad is the road that leads to destruction ...
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narrow is the road that leads to life."
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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This plays very well in the South.
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Now: bicycles.
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Bicycles and bicycling are the current revolution underway
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in only some American cities.
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But where you build it, they come.
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As a planner, I hate to say that, but the one thing I can say
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is that bicycle population is a function of bicycle infrastructure.
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I asked my friend Tom Brennan from Nelson\Nygaard in Portland
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to send me some pictures of the Portland bike commute.
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He sent me this. I said, "Was that bike to work day?"
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He said, "No, that was Tuesday."
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When you do what Portland did and spend money on bicycle infrastructure --
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New York City has doubled the number of bikers in it several times now
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by painting these bright green lanes.
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Even automotive cities like Long Beach, California:
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vast uptick in the number of bikers based on the infrastructure.
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And of course, what really does it,
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if you know 15th Street here in Washington, DC --
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please meet Rahm Emanuel's new bike lanes in Chicago,
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the buffered lane, the parallel parking pulled off the curb,
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14:17
the bikes between the parked cars and the curb --
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these mint cyclists.
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If, however, as in Pasadena, every lane is a bike lane,
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then no lane is a bike lane.
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And this is the only bicyclist that I met in Pasadena, so ...
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(Laughter)
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The parallel parking I mentioned --
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it's an essential barrier of steel
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that protects the curb and pedestrians from moving vehicles.
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This is Ft. Lauderdale; one side of the street, you can park,
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the other side of the street, you can't.
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This is happy hour on the parking side.
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This is sad hour on the other side.
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And then the trees themselves slow cars down.
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They move slower when trees are next to the road,
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and, of course, sometimes they slow down very quickly.
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All the little details -- the curb return radius.
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Is it one foot or is it 40 feet?
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How swoopy is that curb to determine how fast the car goes
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and how much room you have to cross.
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And then I love this, because this is objective journalism.
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"Some say the entrance to CityCenter is not inviting to pedestrians."
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When every aspect of the landscape is swoopy,
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15:19
is aerodynamic, is stream-form geometrics,
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15:22
it says: "This is a vehicular place."
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15:24
So no one detail, no one speciality, can be allowed to set the stage.
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And here, you know, this street:
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yes, it will drain within a minute of the hundred-year storm,
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but this poor woman has to mount the curb every day.
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So then quickly, the comfortable walk has to do with the fact
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that all animals seek, simultaneously, prospect and refuge.
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We want to be able to see our predators,
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but we also want to feel that our flanks are covered.
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And so we're drawn to places that have good edges,
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15:53
and if you don't supply the edges, people won't want to be there.
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What's the proper ratio of height to width?
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Is it one to one? Three to one?
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If you get beyond one to six, you're not very comfortable anymore.
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You don't feel enclosed.
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Now, six to one in Salzburg can be perfectly delightful.
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The opposite of Salzburg is Houston.
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The point being the parking lot is the principal problem here.
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However, missing teeth, those empty lots can be issues as well,
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and if you have a missing corner because of an outdated zoning code,
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16:22
then you could have a missing nose in your neighborhood.
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That's what we had in my neighborhood.
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16:27
This was the zoning code that said I couldn't build on that site.
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16:30
As you may know, Washington, DC is now changing its zoning
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16:34
to allow sites like this to become sites like this.
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16:37
We needed a lot of variances to do that.
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16:39
Triangular houses can be interesting to build,
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16:42
but if you get one built, people generally like it.
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16:44
So you've got to fill those missing noses.
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And then, finally, the interesting walk:
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signs of humanity.
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We are among the social primates.
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Nothing interests us more than other people.
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We want signs of people.
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So the perfect one-to-one ratio, it's a great thing.
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This is Grand Rapids, a very walkable city,
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17:01
but nobody walks on this street
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that connects the two best hotels together,
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because if on the left, you have an exposed parking deck,
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17:09
and on the right, you have a conference facility
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17:12
that was apparently designed in admiration for that parking deck,
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17:15
then you don't attract that many people.
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17:18
Mayor Joe Riley, in his 10th term, Mayor of Charleston, South Carolina,
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taught us it only takes 25 feet of building
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17:24
to hide 250 feet of garage.
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17:27
This one I call the Chia Pet Garage. It's in South Beach.
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That active ground floor.
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I want to end with this project that I love to show.
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It's by Meleca Architects. It's in Columbus, Ohio.
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To the left is the convention center neighborhood, full of pedestrians.
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17:40
To the right is the Short North neighborhood -- ethnic,
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great restaurants, great shops, struggling.
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17:45
It wasn't doing very well because this was the bridge,
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17:48
and no one was walking from the convention center
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17:50
into that neighborhood.
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17:52
Well, when they rebuilt the highway, they added an extra 80 feet to the bridge.
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17:56
Sorry -- they rebuilt the bridge over the highway.
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17:58
The city paid 1.9 million dollars,
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18:01
they gave the site to a developer,
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18:03
the developer built this
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18:04
and now the Short North has come back to life.
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18:07
And everyone says, the newspapers, not the planning magazines,
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18:10
the newspapers say it's because of that bridge.
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18:12
So that's it. That's the general theory of walkability.
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Think about your own cities.
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Think about how you can apply it.
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You've got to do all four things at once.
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18:21
So find those places where you have most of them
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and fix what you can,
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fix what still needs fixing in those places.
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I really appreciate your attention,
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and thank you for coming today.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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