Urban Design in the Real Estate Development Process
Author: Steve Tiesdell and David Adams | Size: 23.8 MB | Format: PDF | Quality: Unspecified | Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell | Year: 2011 | pages: 344 | ISBN: 1405192194
Urban design enables better places to be created for people and is thus seen in Urban Design in the Real Estate Development Process as a place-making activity, rather than the application of architectural aesthetics. Urban design policy can change the ‘decision environment’ of developers, financiers, designers and other actors in the real estate development process to make them take place-making more seriously.
This book reports diverse international experience from Europe and North America on the role and significance of urban design in the real estate development process and explores how higher quality development and better places can be achieved through public policy.
The book is focused on four types of policy tool or instrument that have been deployed to promote better urban design: those that seek to shape, to regulate or to provide stimulus to real estate markets, along with those that aim to build
capacity. Urban design is therefore seen as a form of public policy that seeks to steer real estate development towards policy-shaped rather than market-led outcomes. The editors set the examples, case studies and evidence from
international contributors within a substantive discussion of the impact of urban design policy tools and actions in specific development contexts.
Contributions from leading urban design theorists and practitioners explore how:
Masterplanning and infrastructure provision encourage high quality design
Design codes reconcile developers’ needs for certainty and flexibility
Clear policy combined with firm regulation can transform developer behaviour
Intelligent parcelisation can craft the character of successful new urban districts
Powerful real estates’ interests can capture regulatory initiatives
Stimulus instruments can encourage good design
Development competitions need careful management
Design review can foster developer commitment to design excellence
• Speculative housebuilders respond in varied ways to the brownfield design challenge
Physical-financial models could help in assessing the benefits of design investment
Urban design can add value to the benefit of developers and cities as a whole
This book reports diverse international experience from Europe and North America on the role and significance of urban design in the real estate development process and explores how higher quality development and better places can be achieved through public policy.
The book is focused on four types of policy tool or instrument that have been deployed to promote better urban design: those that seek to shape, to regulate or to provide stimulus to real estate markets, along with those that aim to build
capacity. Urban design is therefore seen as a form of public policy that seeks to steer real estate development towards policy-shaped rather than market-led outcomes. The editors set the examples, case studies and evidence from
international contributors within a substantive discussion of the impact of urban design policy tools and actions in specific development contexts.
Contributions from leading urban design theorists and practitioners explore how:
Masterplanning and infrastructure provision encourage high quality design
Design codes reconcile developers’ needs for certainty and flexibility
Clear policy combined with firm regulation can transform developer behaviour
Intelligent parcelisation can craft the character of successful new urban districts
Powerful real estates’ interests can capture regulatory initiatives
Stimulus instruments can encourage good design
Development competitions need careful management
Design review can foster developer commitment to design excellence
• Speculative housebuilders respond in varied ways to the brownfield design challenge
Physical-financial models could help in assessing the benefits of design investment
Urban design can add value to the benefit of developers and cities as a whole
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