1 / 28

WWPNA General Member Meeting October 16, 2018

WWPNA General Member Meeting October 16, 2018. Blueprint Denver Update. Denveright Comprises Five Plans. Comprehensive Plan 2040 – Vision Plan Game Plan – Parks and Recreation Denver Moves: Pedestrians and Trails Denver Moves: Transit

gitano
Download Presentation

WWPNA General Member Meeting October 16, 2018

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WWPNAGeneral Member MeetingOctober 16, 2018 Blueprint Denver Update

  2. Denveright Comprises Five Plans • Comprehensive Plan 2040 – Vision Plan • Game Plan – Parks and Recreation • Denver Moves: Pedestrians and Trails • Denver Moves: Transit • Blueprint Denver Update – Integrated Land Use and Transportation This presentation focuses on the Blueprint Denver update

  3. WWPNA Composition • Speer Statistical • North of Alameda and South of Speer • From and including Downing (west side) through Lincoln • West Washington Park • South of Alameda to I-25 • From and including Downing (west side) through Lincoln

  4. WWP’s Historical Zoning From 1959 up to the adoption of Blueprint Denver, WWP was zoned: • From Alameda to Mississippi, “R-2” (Single Family and Duplexes) • From Mississippi to I-25 and from Emerson through Downing, “R-1” (Single Family) • Pockets of “B-1” and “B-2” businesses (e.g., Wash Perk); some “B-4” on S. Broadway

  5. Speer Statistical’s Historical Zoning • From 1959 up to the adoption of Blueprint Denver, Speer Statistical was zoned: • “R-3” (multi-family, duplex, single family) • Higher density designations along Speer • Pockets of “B-1” and “B-2” neighborhood-serving businesses; some “B-4” along S. Broadway

  6. WWP’s “Right”-Zoning • Working collaboratively with WWP residents, District 7’s councilman, and Community Planning: • The former “R-2” area of WWP (south of Alameda to Mississippi and from Downing through Lincoln) was rezoned to “R-1” • This corrected the mismatch between zoning and the existing land-use pattern of WWP • Now substantially all of WWP and part of Speer is zoned Single Family

  7. Blueprint Denver: Background • Guided Growth by identifying: • Areas of Change • The area west of Broadway was an Area of Change: • Designated for significant growth • Broadway Station • Alameda Station • Areas of Stability • WWP was an Area of Stability • Much of Speer Statistical was an Area of Stability • “Committed” Areas – E.g., limited pockets for reinvestment

  8. Other Plans for Guidance • West Washington Park Neighborhood Plan • Broadway Transit Station Area Plan • Alameda Transit Station Area Plan • Louisiana-Pearl Kiss-and-Ride Area Plan

  9. Fast Forward:Blueprint Denver Update • The Blueprint Denver Update Plan comprises several chapters: • Chapter 1: Introduction; general information • Chapter 2: Vision; growth strategy • Chapter 3: Recommendations; implementation • Chapter 4: Equitable planning • Chapter 5: “Complete” neighborhoods • Chapter 6: Neighborhood Contexts • Chapter 7: Glossary; Appendix

  10. Growth Strategy • 80% of growth to be directed to: • Regional Centers • Community Centers and Corridors • High and Medium-High Intensity Residential Areas in Downtown Denver and Urban Center • Greenfield Residential Areas • Certain Districts Only 20% of Household growth directed other places

  11. Growth Strategy Maps

  12. Implementation; Recommendations • Through small area plans, master plans, plan amendments • Through policies and strategies organized by three elements of “Complete” neighborhoods: • Land Use and Built Form • Mobility • Quality of Life Intrastructure

  13. “Complete” NeighborhoodsThree Elements • Land Use and Built Form • Block Pattern • Building Scale • Parking • Quality of Life Intrastructure • Parks • Greenspace • Mobility • Pedestrian • Bicycle • Transit • Multi-modal • Autos and goods

  14. Future Places • Centers (mixed-use, centered around shared space) • Local • Community • Regional • Corridors (mixed-use, along streets) • Local • Community • Transitions between corridors and lower-scale residential areas are important; attention should be paid to lot coverage, bulk, scale, open space, parking; pedestrian amenities • Districts (e.g., hospitals, school campuses) • Residential

  15. WWPNA Centers and Corridors • Local Centers and Corridors • Primarily serving neighborhood and nearby neighborhood residents • Primarily dining, entertainment, shopping • E.g., Pub on Pearl, Carmines on Penn • Accessible by walking, bicycling, some local transit • Compatible and consistent with the character of surrounding area in terms of scale and design

  16. WWPNA Centers and Corridors (Cont) • Community Centers and Corridors • Primarily serve neighborhood and surrounding communities • Dining, entertainment, shopping, employment; some residential • Mid scale buildings, compatible with surrounding area • Accessible by variety of transportation (e.g., pedestrian, bicycle, medium transit) • E.g., Broadway, between 1st and 6th Avenues; some places along Speer

  17. WWPNA Centers and Corridors (Cont) • Regional: • Combination of residential, dining, shopping, entertainment, employment • Larger scale mixed use buildings • Accessible by high-capacity transit; pedestrian and bicycles within area • E.g., Broadway and Alameda Station Areas, west of Broadway

  18. Complete “Networks” • Deals with modes of transportation; multiple modes of transportation are most desired for “complete” neighborhoods • Pedestrian • Bicycle • Transit • Autos and goods • Multi-modal • Some segments of streets may be partly one type of transportation, then changing to another type

  19. Neighborhood “Contexts” • WWP • Urban Neighborhood Context (Chapter 6.2) • Development to be consistent with existing neighborhood character • High degree of walkability, bicycles, transit • Alleys; parking behind buildings and on street • Low residential

  20. Urban Places Map

  21. Urban Context: Residential Areas “Low” residential; currently defined as: • Predominantly single family and two-unit on smaller lots • Vacant institutional uses on corners or “select” sites may be appropriate for additional residential density • ADUs and duplexes “thoughtfully” integrated NOTE: Per Plan, proposed rezonings to two-units depends on existing character of neighborhood, neighborhood plan, other plan guidance and neighborhood input. Applicant-driven rezonings generally only appropriate if there is an established pattern of the proposed use in surrounding blocks

  22. General Urban Places Map

  23. General Urban Context: Residential Areas • Residential varies from mixed-use, multi-unit buildings to compact single family homes; multi-unit most common form • Development should be sensitive to neighborhood context • Residential zones range from “low-medium” to “medium-high”, to “high” • ADUs already permitted

  24. General Urban Context: Residential Areas (Cont) • “Low-Medium” means: • Single family and two-unit homes, interspersed with lower-scale multi-unit buildings • Neighborhood serving commercial on some corners • Three stories are common • High lot coverage, with shallow setbacks • “High-Medium” means: • Mix of low to medium scale multi-unit residential • Up to 8 stories • Mixed-use mixed in

  25. CONCLUSION • WWPNA is already a “Complete” Neighborhood • Between Speer and WWP, it comprises a mix of Urban and General Urban Contexts • WWPNA is multi-modal, with two major transit stations on its western border; bus service along Alameda; bike lanes on Washington and Emerson; sidewalk improvements underway throughout neighborhoods • Over 4,000 new units have been built or planned within or on WWPNA’s borders. WWPNA has and is sharing in the burden of growth already.

More Related