HomeMy WebLinkAboutPlan Appendix A Best Practices
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐1
APPENDIX A
IMPLEMENTING BEST PRACTICES
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐2
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐3
IMPLEMENTING BEST PRACTICES
Land development and regulatory practices form the foundation for implementing a comprehensive plan, and
establishing the future direction, character, and sense of place of the community. This appendix includes
demonstrated and proven best practices in planning that are recommended for implementing the goals and policies of
this plan. Implementation of the plan should not be limited to these practices alone, though.
A.1 Smart Growth
In the Town of Ithaca, there is growing concern that the current development pattern, dominated by what some call
"sprawl", is no longer in the long-term interest of the community. Though supportive of growth, residents and
community leaders are questioning the economic and social costs of continued vehicle-oriented low density
development.
Smart Growth is a planning strategy with the goal of accommodating development and growth, while also
considering and addressing its negative effects, to create more livable, sustainable and humane communities.
There are many definitions of "Smart Growth." Perhaps the most encompassing comes from the City of Austin,
Texas Neighborhood Planning Glossary.
"A perspective, method, and goal for managing the growth of a community. It focuses on the long-term implications
of growth and how it may affect the community, instead of viewing growth as an end in itself. The community can
vary in size; it may be as small as a city block or a neighborhood, or as large as a city, a metropolitan area, or even a
region. Smart Growth promotes cooperation between often diverse groups to arrive at sustainable long-term
strategies for managing growth. It is designed to create livable cities, promote economic development, and protect
open spaces, environmentally sensitive areas, and agricultural lands."
The American Planning Association adopted the following definition of smart growth.
"Smart Growth is the planning, design, development and revitalization of communities to promote a sense of place,
the preservation of natural and cultural resources, and the equitable distribution of the costs and benefits of
development. Smart Growth enhances ecological integrity over the short and long term and improves quality of life
by expanding the range of transportation, employment, and housing choices in the region in a fiscally responsible
manner."
Spurring the Smart Growth movement are demographic shifts, a strong environmental ethic, increased fiscal
concerns, and more nuanced views of growth. The result is both a new demand and a new opportunity for smart
growth.
The United States Environmental Protection Agency identifies the following ten principles of Smart Growth:
1) Create a range of housing opportunities and choices.
2) Create walkable neighborhoods.
3) Encourage community and stakeholder collaboration.
4) Foster distinctive, attractive communities with a strong sense of place.
5) Make development decisions predictable, fair and cost effective.
6) Mix land uses.
7) Preserve open space, farmland, natural beauty and critical environmental areas.
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐4
8) Provide a variety of transportation
choices.
9) Strengthen and direct development
towards existing communities.
10) Take advantage of compact building
design.
The Town of Ithaca has little control over
whether its population will grow. However, it
can control how it grows. Smart growth
introduces new, sound planning principles
that will help make the Town a more livable,
desirable and sustainable community.
Smart Growth principles
Create a range of housing opportunities
and choices. Many young adults are finding
they can't afford to buy a home in the City or Town of Ithaca, and are resorting to lower-priced housing in distant
communities with long commutes. Many senior citizens, now empty nesters or living alone, can no longer maintain
or heat homes that were originally built to accommodate a large family.
Providing quality housing for people of all generations, income levels and social groups is an integral component in a
smart growth strategy. Housing is a critical part of the way the Town grows, and constitutes a significant share of
new construction and development. More importantly, it is a key factor in determining households' access to
transportation, employment, retail and social amenities, schools, and consumption of natural resources. By using
Smart Growth techniques to create a wider range of housing choices, the Town can mitigate the environmental costs
of auto-dependent development, use its infrastructure more efficiently, ensure a better jobs-housing balance, and
generate a strong foundation of support for public transportation, mixed use neighborhood centers, and other
amenities.
Create walkable neighborhoods. Walkable
communities are seen as desirable places to
live, work, and play. Residential areas in the
City of Ithaca, and pedestrian-oriented
neighborhoods in other Upstate New York
cities, are experiencing renewed life and
increasing real estate values. Walkable
neighborhoods are seen as desirable, because
housing, retail and entertainment uses, and
places of employment are conveniently
located an easy and safe walk from each
other. Walkable communities also make
pedestrian activity possible, thus expanding
transportation options, and creating a
streetscape that better serves pedestrians,
bicyclists, transit riders, and automobiles.
Prospect New Town, Longmont, Colorado. (Prospect New Town)
Shaker Square, Cleveland, Ohio. (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐5
Development in the Town of Ithaca is dispersed and largely auto-dependent, built under design practices that reduce
pedestrian activity. A conventional zoning ordinance makes mixed land use development difficult. It would be
impossible to recreate historic Upstate villages such as Skaneateles, Cazenovia, or East Aurora today. Land use and
community design play a pivotal role in encouraging pedestrian environments. By enabling development with
multiple destinations within close proximity, where the streets and sidewalks balance all forms of transportation, the
Town will have the basic framework for encouraging walkability.
Encourage community and stakeholder collaboration. Growth can create great places to live, work and play, if it
is channeled into a community's own sense of how and where it wants to develop. Each of the Town's "hills" has
different needs and will emphasize some smart growth principles over others.
Citizen participation can be time-consuming and frustrating. Encouraging community and stakeholder collaboration,
though, can lead to creative resolution of development issues and greater understanding of the importance of good
planning and the "big picture." Plans and policies developed without strong citizen involvement will, at best, have no
staying power; at worst, they will be used to create unhealthy, undesirable communities. When stakeholders feel left
out of the planning process, they will be less likely to become engaged when tough decisions need to be made.
Involving the community early and often in the planning process improves public support for Smart Growth and
often leads to innovative strategies that fit the unique needs of each community.
Foster distinctive, attractive communities with a strong sense of place. Retail architecture conforming to
corporate prototype design, and residential development in a conventional subdivision of large lots and cul-de-sacs,
dilute the identity and character of a community.
Smart Growth encourages communities to craft a vision and set standards for development that responds to
community values of architectural beauty and distinctiveness, as well as expanded choices in housing and
transportation. It seeks to create interesting, unique communities that reflect the values and cultures of the people
who live there, and foster physical environments that supports a more cohesive community fabric. Smart Growth
promotes development that uses natural and man-made boundaries and landmarks to create a sense of defined places.
It encourages construction and preservation of buildings that contribute to the unique look and feel of a community.
Guided by a vision of how and where to grow, the Town is able to identify and use opportunities to make new
development conform to their standards of
distinctiveness and beauty. Contrary to the
current mode of development, Smart Growth
ensures that the value of development is
determined as much by its accessibility as its
physical orientation to and relationship with
other buildings and open space. By creating
high-quality communities with architectural
and natural elements that reflect its character,
there is a greater likelihood that buildings,
and their surrounding neighborhoods, will
retain their economic vitality and value over
time.
Make development decisions predictable,
fair and cost effective. For Smart Growth
to be successful, it must be embraced by the Main Street, Williamsville, New York. (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐6
private sector. Only private capital markets
can supply the large amounts of money
needed to meet the growing demand for
smart growth developments. If investors,
bankers, developers, builders and others do
not earn a profit, few Smart Growth projects
will be built. Fortunately, the Town can help
make Smart Growth profitable to developers.
Since the development industry is highly
regulated, the value of property and the
desirability of a place are largely affected by
regulation and investment in infrastructure.
Sound infrastructure and regulatory decisions
wilt foster fair, predictable and cost effective
smart growth.
Despite regulatory and financial barriers,
developers have been successful in creating examples of Smart Growth. The process to do so, however, requires them
to get variances to existing codes; often a time-consuming and costly requirement. For Smart Growth to flourish, the
Town must make an effort to make development decisions more timely, cost-effective, and predictable for developers.
By creating a fertile environment for innovative projects, local government can provide leadership for smart growth
that the private sector should support.
Mix land uses. Zoning emerged as a response to the unregulated nature of land use in the early 20th century, and
the noxious character of many businesses and industries of the time. Early zoning codes were intended to protect
homeowners from uses such as slaughterhouses, tanneries, and glue factories, which would be a nuisance that could
devalue residential properties. Today, some contemporary zoning codes prevent the mixing of residential and
commercial uses, even for a well-planned project where the threat of a nuisance is nonexistent.
Smart Growth supports the integration of mixed land uses into communities as a critical component of achieving
better places to live. By putting uses in closer proximity to one another, alternatives to driving, such as walking or
biking, once again become viable. Mixed land uses also provide a more diverse and sizable population and
commercial base for supporting viable public transit. Mixed uses can enhance the vitality and perceived security of
an area by improving the attitude and
increasing the number of people on the
street.
Not all mixed use is desirable; for example,
storage of heavy equipment or operation of
construction yards on residential property, as
occasionally seen in rural areas. Well
planned mixed use development helps streets,
public spaces and pedestrian-oriented retail
again become places where people meet,
attracting pedestrians back onto the street
and revitalizing community life. Smart
Growth provides a means for the Town to
alter the planning context that now renders
mixed land uses illegal.
Shalebrook Farm, Town of Ithaca.
Elmwood Village, Buffalo, New York (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐7
Preserve open space, farmland, natural beauty and critical environmental areas. Development pressure and
the impact of urbanization on agricultural uses are threats to the Town's remaining farmland. With large lot
residential development increasingly commonplace, it now takes fewer people and houses to occupy a section of land
than in the past.
Smart Growth uses the term "open space" broadly to include natural areas that provide important community space,
habitat for plants and animals, recreational opportunities, farm and nursery land, places of natural beauty, and critical
environmental areas. Open space preservation supports Smart Growth goals by protecting the character of rural and
semi-rural communities, preserving critical environmental areas, improving the region's quality of life, and guiding
new growth into existing communities and areas where there will be less impact on the natural environment.
Protection and maintenance of open space provides fiscal benefits that include increasing local property value,
encouraging tourism, and reducing the cost of providing new infrastructure. Preservation of open space benefits the
environment by combating air pollution, attenuating noise from busy highways, providing erosion and wind control,
moderating temperatures, and protecting watersheds and pristine rivers.
Provide a variety of transportation choices. Traffic congestion is an issue in some parts of the town. Although
the Ithaca area doesn't face the same traffic woes that beset many North American cities, increasing urban sprawl is
resulting in longer commutes and increased travel times.
Providing people with more choices in housing, shopping, communities, and transportation is a key aim of Smart
Growth. Communities are increasingly seeking these choices, particularly a wider range of transportation options
with supportive development patterns, to help improve beleaguered transportation systems.
Strengthen and direct development towards existing communities. Smart Growth directs development towards
established communities already served by infrastructure, seeking to use resources that existing neighborhoods offer,
and conserve open space on the urban fringe. Development in existing neighborhoods also represents an approach to
growth that can be more cost-effective, and
improves the quality of life for its
residents. By encouraging development in
established cities and villages, they benefit
from a stronger tax base, closer proximity
to a range of jobs and services, increased
efficiency of already developed land and
infrastructure, reduced development
pressure in edge areas, and stronger rural
and estate communities.
The ease of greenfield development
remains an obstacle to encouraging more
development in existing neighborhoods.
Nevertheless, some communities are
recognizing the opportunities presented by
retrofitting and infill development.
Take advantage of compact building
design. Smart Growth provides a way for
the Town to incorporate more compact
building design as an alternative to conventional, land consumptive development. Compact building design suggests
Fairview Village, Portland, Oregon. (Brett VA/Creative Commons license)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐8
that communities be designed in a way which permits more open space to be preserved, and that buildings can be
constructed to make more efficient use of land and resources.
Compact building design is necessary to support wider transportation choices because a minimum level of density is
required to make public transit networks viable. It also provides cost savings for localities, because it is less costly to
provide and maintain services like water, sewer, electricity, and other utilities in more compact communities.
A.2 Traditional neighborhood development
In his book A Better Place to Live: Reshaping the American Suburb, Philip Langdon described East Aurora, a village
of about 7,500 residents 15 miles southeast of Buffalo, as a "nearly complete", "compact and walkable" community
where "nearly everything the inhabitants needed, except a full range of employment, was close to home."
Traditional neighborhood development (TND) or neotraditional development is a form of development that takes its
inspiration from the "nearly" complete communities of the past; villages like East Aurora, and urban and suburban
neighborhoods built between World Wars I and II. TND includes a range of housing types, network of
interconnected streets, human-scaled public spaces, and amenities such as shops, schools, parks, and places of
worship within walking distance of all residences.
There is growing support for creating denser, more walkable and interconnected neighborhoods in the town, with
housing and amenities that appeal to a broader range of households, lifestyles, life stages, and income ranges. TND
can better accommodate this than the collections of disconnected subdivisions, cluster developments, semi-rural
frontage development, and apartment complexes now prevalent.
Major differences between TND and conventional suburban development include:
Traditional neighborhood development Conventional suburban development
Street networks are interconnected, with multiple routes
between destinations.
Street networks are dendritic, or take a "loop and lollypop"
form, with limited routes between destinations.
Some mixed use: e.g. apartments above storefronts, accessory
offices at intersections, different types of housing may share a
block.
Different uses and building types are segregated into pods.
Range of housing types in close proximity, providing for a
variety of income ranges and life stages.
Very limited variety of housing types, separated into physically
disconnected pods with limited or no access between them.
Anchored by a village center or commercial district, located
within walking distance of most residents.
Commercial districts isolated in strips along busy roads, usually
beyond walking distance of most residents.
Village of East Aurora, New York. (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐9
Traditional neighborhood development Conventional suburban development
Commercial districts built on a pedestrian scale; building
entrances and storefronts face the street and front the
sidewalk.
Commercial districts built on a vehicular scale; buildings are
placed behind a parking lot, and building entrances often do
not face the street.
Civic uses (town halls, post offices, places of worship, schools)
are placed in or near a neighborhood or village center, or in
prominent but accessible locations.
Civic uses are scattered throughout the community with no
regards to accessibility; often in areas outside of
neighborhoods.
Gathering places are in the public realm (main street,
sidewalks, squares, etc).
Gathering places are in the private realm (shopping centers,
subdivision and apartment building common buildings, etc).
Parks are located in prominent locations, and front on public
streets.
Parks and open space are placed on remnant parcels, often in
linear corridors behind back yards.
Streets are narrower, and designed to accommodate
pedestrians and vehicles.
Streets are wide, designed mainly for efficient, high‐speed
traffic flow.
On‐street parking is accommodated in all areas. Off‐street parking is preferred. Commercial areas have no on‐
street parking.
Buildings are placed closer to the sidewalk. Buildings are placed as far away from the street as possible,
distancing occupants from street life and their neighbors.
A neighborhood conveys a strong sense of place.A subdivision could be anywhere.
A comparison of traditional neighborhood development to conventional suburban development. (Post, Nadine M.,
"Putting Brakes on Suburban Sprawl," Engineering News–Record, May 9, 1994, pp. 32–39.)
Reduced sprawl and farmland conversion. TND is
more compact than conventional suburban development,
and will slow the conversion of agricultural land and open
space to urban uses. Compact development also uses
land, energy, water, and materials more efficiently and
wisely than conventional suburban development.
Lower service costs. TND services a similar number of
residences with far less infrastructure. Development and
maintenance costs are lower because the same length of
road and utilities can serve more residences.
Expanded housing choice. TND accommodates a wider
range of housing types than conventional suburban
development. It addresses a disconnect between the
supply of housing in the town (development catering
mainly to traditional families with children, and low-
moderate income households) and demand (growing
percentage of households comprising professional singles,
childless couples, single parents, empty nesters, retirees,
and non-traditional households). Housing can be made
more affordable through increased density rather than
expensive subsidies or lowered standards.
Appeal to younger adults and a new generation of
retirees. Those who belong to Generation X and
Generation Y (born between 1965 and 1995) have a marked preference for living in more walkable, compact and
diverse neighborhoods compared to previous generations. Such neighborhoods may also appeal to recent
retirees, who are increasingly choosing to settle in culturally vibrant college towns such as Ithaca instead of age-
segregated communities or Sunbelt destinations.
A comparison of traditional neighborhood development
(top) to conventional suburban development (bottom).
(Nadine Post, "Putting Brakes on Suburban Sprawl,"
Engineering News–Record, May 1994.)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐10
Safer public spaces. Parks, streets, and civic spaces are safer and more defensible, because they are more
accessible and visually prominent, and get more use.
Community for the carless. Residents who cannot drive, including children and many senior citizens, can more
easily take part in the day-to-day life of the community, and not be physically or socially isolated. TND also
increases the viability of public transit by providing a simple street network, increased population density, and an
environment that makes a walk to a bus stop more interesting.
Reduced vehicle trips. Providing some retail and commercial services within walking distance of residents will
reduce the need to drive outside of the neighborhood to find those services.
Healthier living. Likelihood of obesity and health issues due to a sedentary lifestyle is reduced by having a mix
of uses and services within walking distance.
TND should be the preferred form of development in the Town of Ithaca, as opposed to conventional subdivisions,
frontage development, and podded cluster development.
Stapleton: traditional neighborhood development in Denver, Colorado. (DT)
A.3 Form‐ and transect‐based codes
A.3.1 Form‐based codes
Form-based codes regulate development of
the built environment by placing an emphasis
on guiding the form that development takes,
rather than focusing on land use as with
traditional zoning. Form-based codes are
intended to create a more predictable physical
outcome than traditional zoning, and achieve
a specific urban form.
Form-based codes usually include the
following elements:
Regulating plan: shows the locations
where different building form standards
apply.
Public space standards: specifications for
the built environment in the public realm;
types of streets, street profiles, planting
areas and landscaping, sidewalks, light poles, drainage, and so on.
Celebration, Florida. (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐11
Building form standards: regulations controlling the configuration, features, and functions of buildings that shape
the public realm. This also includes architectural design, signage, lighting, landscaping, and drainage
requirements. Building type may also be regulated.
Major differences between conventional zoning and form-based codes include:
Form‐based code Conventional zoning code
Implements a comprehensive plan by regulating the physical
character of specified areas.
Implements a comprehensive plan by limiting types of uses to
specified areas.
Intended to address development issues of the present; avoid
effects of sprawl, create sense of place, create neighborhoods,
provide housing diversity.
Intended to address development issues of the past;
tenements and urban overcrowding, noxious and intrusive
nuisances, growing automobile ownership.
Focuses on the form of a building as it relates to the street and
adjacent uses.
Focuses on the use and development of individual lots.
Regulates with primary emphasis on form (buildings and their
relationship to the street and each other), secondarily on use
and management.
Regulates with primary emphasis on use (separation of uses),
secondarily on management and form.
Placement of buildings on the lot is regulated by build‐to lines,
which specify building location relative to lot lines.
Placement of buildings is governed by uniform minimum
setbacks that create a building envelope. The location and
form of a building in a building envelope is unpredictable.
Street standards vary based on the regulating plan and the
desired character for a street.
Street standards are independent of zoning districts and land
use.
Regulates parking design in understanding that poorly
designed parking undermines pedestrian activity and interest
in a place. Parking is placed behind buildings to develop
walkable streetscapes.
Location and form of parking is usually not regulated.
Required parking is based on reasonable need, also considers
availability of on‐street parking.
Required parking is based on worst‐case scenarios; e.g. Black
Friday at the peak of an economic boom.
Street standards are designed so that pedestrians feel safe and
to encourage walkability.
Street standards are designed primarily to maximize auto
volume and speed.
Physical outcomes and building placement are predictable.Physical outcomes and building placement are unpredictable,
especially if there is a large building envelope.
Permitted uses are based on building form, street type, and an
underlying regulating plan.
Permitted uses are based on underlying zoning.
Compatibility of uses is achieved through design and building
orientation.
Compatibility of uses is achieved through grouping of similar
uses, strict separation of uses, and buffers.
Form‐based codes accommodate development that is
compact, mixed use, and pedestrian friendly.
The structure of traditional zoning codes makes it difficult to
accommodate pedestrian‐oriented and mixed use
development.
Development standards are prescriptive, ensuring a
predictable design and approval process.
Development standards are sometimes negotiable (site plan
review, local laws, vague planned unit development standards),
prolonging the design and approval process.
Regulates to create places. Regulates to create buildings.
A.3.2 Transect‐based codes
A transect-based code is based on the ecological concept of a transect; a cross-section of the environment showing a
range of different habitats. A transect-based code establishes a number of transect zones, each distinguished by its
density and shared character. Transect zones that form the foundation of most transect-based codes usually include:
T1: lands approximating or reverting to a wilderness condition, including lands unsuitable for settlement.
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐12
T2: sparsely settled lands in an open or cultivated state.
T3: lower density residential areas next to higher density zones that have some mixed use.
T4: mixed use but primarily medium density residential urban/prewar suburban fabric.
T5: higher density mixed use buildings that accommodate retail, offices, rowhouses, and apartments.
T6: highest density and height, with the greatest variety of uses, and civic buildings of local importance.
Rural‐to‐urban transect. (Duany Plater‐Zyberk and Company)
The scope of transect zones is less granular than conventional zoning districts, where there may be only minor
differences in minimum setbacks or permitted uses. Transect zones are intended to be balanced in a neighborhood
structure based on pedestrian sheds, or areas where every resident in a neighborhood is a short walk from any other
habitat, such as a village center, civic space, or farmland.
All transect-based codes are form-based codes, because they are based on the physical form of the built and natural
environment. Major differences between conventional zoning and form-based codes include:
Transec t‐based code Conventional zoning code
Implement a comprehensive plan by create communities with
a range of human habitats, from most rural to most urban.
Implements a comprehensive plan by limiting types of uses to
specified areas.
Regulates with primary emphasis on form (buildings and their
relationship to the street and each other), secondarily on use
and management.
Regulates with primary emphasis on use (separation of uses),
secondarily on management and form.
Development is structured into neighborhood patterns
(clustered land development, traditional neighborhood
development, and town center development).
Development is not intentionally structured into particular
patterns, and there is no goal of creating coherent
neighborhoods.
Requires a mix of housing types and sizes in a walkable
neighborhood.
Most standards are applied across all zones as one‐size‐fits‐all
regulations.
Districts are based on shared character. Districts are based on shared use.
All zones are mixed use to some degree. Most zones prohibit mixed uses. A planned unit development
is necessary to build a mixed use development.
Requires a mix of uses within a walkable neighborhood.Allows development of vast areas of a single land use. Walking
distance to other uses is not a factor.
Creates a diverse variety of immersive environments, ranging
from the most rural to the most urban.
Mostly low density suburban residential development is
scattered among natural areas and agricultural land, creating
homogenized or contradictory environments.
Requires development of connected street networks.No specific street layout requirements. Allows development of
dendritic street networks.
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐13
Transect‐based development under the SmartCode. (Marley Porter of Living Architecture for the City of Hutto, Texas Planning
Department.)
A.3.3 The SmartCode
The SmartCode is an open source, form-based and transect-based land development code. The SmartCode is
designed to create interconnected, walkable neighborhoods across the spectrum of human settlement, from the most
rural to the most urban, incorporating a transect of character and intensity within each. The SmartCode is intended
to be calibrated to local and desired conditions by professional planners.
The SmartCode regulates development based on a nesting relationship of the town or city, neighborhood, transect
zone, and building lot.
Regional scale: growth sectors contain designated types of community units.
Neighborhood scale: community units contain designated ratios of transect zones.
Transect zones contain the building elements and functions appropriate to them.
Lot / building scale.
Regional scale
A regional scale plan designates growth sectors, each establishing the location where certain types and intensities of
community units (PND or pocket neighborhood development, CLD or clustered land development, TND or
traditional neighborhood development, and TCD or town center development) are permitted.
The regional scale plan applies only to development under the SmartCode. This system addresses development and
open space preservation on a townwide scale. Sector locations are well defined on a transect development guidance
plan, and follow tax parcel lines and other fixed boundaries.
Neighborhood scale
Growth sectors permit one or more types of community units. The type and allocation of transect zones permitted in
a community unit varies, depending on the underlying growth sector. There can be more than one community unit in
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐14
a development, even of different types, each
based on a pedestrian shed, an area that is
centered on a common destination. A
community unit should be a five to 10 minute
walk from the common destination to the
edge. The SmartCode also regulates street
layout, and types and placement of open
space in a community unit.
A regulating plan is an approved, legally
binding plan that shows how a specific area
will develop. It includes explanatory text and
maps showing community unit areas, transect
zones, civic areas, and thoroughfare network.
Transect scale
Transects are described in the previous
section. Transect zones include standards
that encourage diversity similar to that of
organically evolved settlements.
Lot/building scale
Charts and tables in the SmartCode regulate the type, bulk, placement, and frontage features of buildings on a lot.
Regulating form
Tables and illustrations in the SmartCode regulate different attributes of development in each of the transects;
including base residential density, block size, thoroughfare types, lot dimensions, building envelopes, and other
attributes. The SmartCode also includes architectural design standards, signage requirements, and additional
modules that can be modified to reflect desired community character.
Regulating use
The SmartCode regulates specific functions and uses, but unlike conventional zoning it's not the basis of the code. A
table in the SmartCode identifies functions that are permitted by right and special permission in each transect, their
intensity, and their permitted location on a block. The general function of a building is determined upon site plan
approval. A use may be permitted in a transect, but only in designated buildings or sites on the community plan. A
regulating plan may also designate mandatory and recommended retail frontages along certain blocks, or confine
retail uses to designated frontages.
Uses are grouped into broader categories than in a conventional zoning code. For example, the SmartCode may
permit a retail building under certain circumstances, while conventional zoning codes typically include a long list of
various retail uses.
Adoption strategy
Most communities that adopted some form of the SmartCode have not abandoned traditional zoning. Different
approaches have been taken, such as making SmartCode mandatory for certain neighborhoods or corridors, making it
an option for new development, or requiring it for new projects of a certain size or scope. Some communities have
incorporated elements of the SmartCode into a hybrid zoning code. Only a few communities have completely
replaced their old zoning codes with the SmartCode.
Public space standard for public streets from the SmartCode 9.0 template.
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐15
A.4 Unified development code
Laws governing planning and land use should be transparent, accessible, and comprehendible by all town residents.
When land use regulations are scattered among disparate chapters of the Town Code, as is the case for the Town of
Ithaca, they can be difficult for town employees to administer and interpret; and for officials, appointed board
members, and citizens to understand and easily reference. There can be conflicts or duplication with the provisions
of other chapters.
A growing number of communities are enacting unified development codes, which consolidate all regulations
regarding development, land use and the built environment into one code. The advantages of a unified development
code over separate chapters among a larger municipal code include:
More efficient administration of land use regulations and the development review process, because all involved
parties only need to be familiar with one set of standards. The approval processes for all types of development
are regulated in one code, not several.
The lack of redundant, conflicting, and/or
inconsistent provisions found in land use control
systems made up of separate codes covering
zoning, subdivision, environmental
requirements, and accessory uses. It reduces the
likelihood for error by staff or applicants.
A more manageable document that can easily
accommodate amendments without creating
conflicts with other code chapters.
The opportunity to create a modern code that
presents existing land use standards in tables,
graphics, and plain English, without using
complicated legal jargon or wordy prose. It also
allows the opportunity to perform a "deep
cleaning" to remove or amend outdated
standards; and to integrate updated standards
and new requirements for site planning,
landscaping, architectural control, and other
aspects of the built environment into the Town's
land use regulations.
Full disclosure of all regulations that can affect a
proposed development. This leads to a more
predictable development process for all involved
parties.
A unified development code can consolidate the
Town's land use standards into a single, consistent,
user-friendly document. A unified development
code can also integrate elements of both traditional
zoning and form-based codes to create a hybrid document that better regulates the form of the built environment, but
that remains familiar to those who have worked with standard zoning codes for years.
Green Code, the new form‐based unified development code of Buffalo,
New York.
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐16
A.5 Institutional zoning
Many communities with college campuses, including the City of Ithaca, use some kind of institutional zoning.
Institutional zoning is intended to give large institutions the flexibility to plan and develop their facilities, while
ensuring that surrounding areas are protected from impacts such as traffic, overshadowing buildings, noise, and other
externalities from laboratories and research facilities, and from expansion of institutional uses into residential areas.
Much like a planned unit development, development in an institutional zone is guided by an approved district plan
based on the institution's master plan. Approval of development in institutional zones with an approved district plan
may be administrative or through a more formal development review process. Some implementations of institutional
zoning allow the option of formal development review for all development on campus if there is no approved district
plan. Institutional zoning districts can also include standards on building bulk and siting, parking and circulation,
lighting, landscaping, screening, and signage.
A.6 Design standards
Design standards are intended to convey a
sense of the preferred quality for a place.
They supplement basic regulations of
building setbacks, height, lot coverage,
parking, and signage with standards for other
elements of the built environment such as
architecture, building orientation, and
landscaping. (The Town of Ithaca now has
basic standards for signage, lighting, and
wireless facilities.)
A.6.1 Architectural standards
Architectural regulations are one of the tools
a growing number of communities use to
reinforce community identity, prevent
placelessness resulting from buildings
constructed with the same standard design as
in hundreds of other communities, reinforce a
human scale, and create a built environment that will maintain a timeless appeal.
Architectural regulations are one of the tools a growing number of communities use to reinforce community identity,
prevent placelessness resulting from buildings constructed with the same standard design as in hundreds of other
communities, reinforce a human scale, and create a built environment that will maintain a timeless appeal.
Architectural regulations for commercial, industrial and civic buildings usually address the following:
Building materials, color and texture.
Building height, bulk, and roof line.
Building proportions.
Openings in the façade: doors, windows, and garage doors, and their location, amount, size and proportions.
Four‐sided design. Architectural details on the front of a building are repeated
on all sides. Independence, Ohio. (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐17
Type and slope of roof.
Wall projections and recesses.
Architectural details.
Architectural regulations for residential
structures can also include standards to
prevent "snout houses" with protruding,
visually predominant garages; and ensure
variety in design to avoid a "cookie cutter"
effect in a new development.
Architectural regulations should be
quantitative, with well-defined and
enumerated standards that are not arbitrary
or subject to interpretation. Contemporary
architectural regulations are intended to help
produce quality structures, regardless of
architectural style. Regulation of
architectural style (e.g. Craftsman, Queen
Anne, Greek Revival, etc.) may discourage creativity and individuality, and perpetuate the kind of monotony that the
standards are intended to prevent.
A.6.2 Site planning standards
Conventional zoning codes usually establish bulk requirements: minimum building setback lines and envelopes,
maximum building height, maximum lot coverage, and/or floor-area ratio. Bulk requirements are intended to
prevent overcrowding, reduce potential conflicts between adjacent uses, and allow adequate light and air to reach all
parts of a lot or building. However, the ultimate location and form of development inside a building envelope can be
unpredictable.
Site planning requirements address the unpredictability of basic bulk requirement by supplementing them with
standards for arranging compositional elements and improvements on a site. Site planning requirements may address
the following:
Orientation of buildings towards the street, walkways, or other features.
Arrangement of buildings in a development.
Placement and amount of walkways, open space, and/or plazas.
Placement of buildings to take advantage of and preserve views and solar access.
Placement and internal arrangement of parking areas, access drives, and circulation routes.
Placement and screening of service and loading areas.
Requirements for public art, water features, public transit stops, and other amenities.
Grading and preservation of natural topography.
Creation of defensible space through Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) strategies,
which includes natural territorial reinforcement, natural surveillance, and natural access control.
Site planning standards are more prescriptive than basic bulk requirements, but generally less prescriptive than
building form standards in a form-based code.
Bold colors used as accents rather than as dominant features. The Domain,
Austin, Texas. (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐18
A.6.3 Landscaping standards
Landscaping regulations help to integrate
the built environment with the natural
environment, and can reinforce the
identity of the Town of Ithaca as an
environmentally aware community that is
close to nature.
Landscaping regulations usually address
the following:
Amount and location of required
plant materials (trees, shrubs,
groundcover) for a residential,
commercial and industrial site.
Required landscaping buffers and
islands.
Permitted and prohibited plant
materials.
Proper installation and maintenance of landscaping.
Tree preservation, removal and replacement.
A.7 Context sensitive solutions
Context sensitive solutions (CSS) is a holistic road design practice that considers the context of the built, natural, and
social environments along the route of a road. Rather than a one-size-fits-all approach to road design that
emphasizes movement of vehicle traffic above all other considerations, CSS considers that a road should fit into its
surroundings, preserving any scenic, aesthetic, historic, cultural and environmental resources, and respecting the
character of developed areas it passes through.
CSS also includes collaboration and consensus with stakeholders throughout the entire planning and design process,
with the goal of arriving at a consensus that addresses the needs of both the transportation agency and all affected
stakeholders.
A.8 Complete streets
Most roads and streets in the Town of Ithaca are designed only with vehicles in mind. Although there is a growing
network of recreation trails in the town, accommodation of bicycles and pedestrians on town roads is rare, and
usually an afterthought where they exist. Single use streets limit transportation choices by making walking, bicycling,
and taking public transportation inconvenient and even unsafe.
Complete streets are roads that are designed to accommodate all users, including motor vehicles, public
transportation vehicles and passengers, bicyclists, and pedestrians of all ages and abilities. Design elements of
complete streets include:
Landscaping area and walkway in a shopping center parking lot. Georgetown,
Texas. (DT)
Town of Ithaca 2014 Comprehensive Plan A‐19
Pedestrian infrastructure such as sidewalks, defined crosswalks, accessible pedestrian signals, and seating at
regular intervals
Traffic calming measures to lower driving speeds and better define the road edge, including narrower streets,
shorter curb return radii, roundabouts, on-street parking, street trees, and planter strips.
Bicycle accommodations, such as marked bicycle lanes or shoulders, or shared lane marking.
Public transportation accommodations, such as shelters and accessible pads at bus stops.
Complete streets policies exclude roads where the cost of accommodation would be too disproportionate to the need
or expected use, and roads where accommodation is unnecessary. For example, a short residential street may need
sidewalks, but not bicycle lanes or pads for bus stops.
Benefits of complete streets include improved safety for all users of a street, improvement of public health by
providing more places to walk and bike, and fostering stronger, more engaged communities by allowing all people to
feel safe and comfortable using the town's roads.
The New York State Complete Streets Act (S05411, A 8366) requires consideration of all road users—motor vehicles,
public transportation, cyclists, and pedestrians—in any transportation project that uses state and federal funds.