Series
Transportation Design for Communities

Series Type
Event Series
Description
Associated Organization(s)
Associated Organization(s)

Publication Search Results

Now showing 1 - 9 of 9
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    The Long-View - Integrating Land Use & Transit – A Story from Charlotte, N.C
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-12) Russ, Troy
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    Case Study: Roswell, GA
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-12) McKinney, Ed
    Module Five-A Case Study: Roswell, GA Module 5a was an impromptu session stemming from audience interest in learning more about creating transportation solutions for suburban locations. This session looked at some of the results of the transportation work done by Glatting Jackson Kercher Anglin Lopez Rinehart, Inc in Roswell, Georgia. Instructor: Ed McKinney, AICP
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    Implementation Tools: Land Use & Transportation
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-12) Russ, Troy
    Module 5 will discuss the implementation process from both a public and private perspective. A property executed community design process that engages vested stakeholders will result in community consensus and political support for most initiatives. This module will outline the needed implementation steps for moving beyond vision to reality. Both short-term partnership and funding opportunities for public initiatives will be discussed as well as longer-term land development regulations and incentives packages needed for contributing private investment. Instructor: Troy Russ, AICP
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    Reframing Key Transportation Conventions
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-12) Russ, Troy
    The primary transportation challenge of any integrated Land Use and Transportation Study is to balance the success and livability of the local community with its responsibility to accommodate regional transportation demand. Livability is focused on balancing vehicular service requirements with local business, neighborhood and pedestrian needs. Module 4 presents how several key transportation obstacles to Livable Street Design should be approached and enable the community development community to engage transportation professionals and ensure transportation facilities are designed for communities. Key transposition conventions examined will include: project design traffic, roadway functional classifications, design speed, and roadway design standards. Instructor: Troy Russ, AICP
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    Nation Trends in Transportation & Community Design
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-12) Jackson, Tim
    Module 6 will review the status of emerging initiatives to design transportation facilities that build better communities. These will include the status of the "context sensitive solutions" initiative of FHWA and AASHTO, particularly focused on the progress that many states are making in bringing this approach to their project development process with specific examples from Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Instructor: Tim Jackson, P.E., AICP
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    Transportation Projects Can Do Great Things
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-11) Lockwood, Ian
    Module 1 will present how transportation projects contribute to community form and development. This module will illustrate numerous community building principles and the transportation system's role in urban settlement patterns. A wide inventory of livable transportation solutions and their real life application will be presented and discussed in this module. Instructor: Ian Lockwood, P.E.
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    Urban Design & Community Context
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-11) Dagenhart, Richard ; McKinney, Ed
    Module 2 will present basic community elements and how these elements can be assessed. This session will demonstrate structural elements of conducting a contextual analysis for the social, physical and economic conditions of a community, or study area, in which the transportation initiative is situated. This multi-disciplined assessment will allow the project team and the local community to understand the complex issues related to community development, its relationship and sensitivity to roadway design alternatives, and most importantly, the expectations of the project's vested stakeholders. Instructors: Ed McKinney, AICP / Richard Dagenhart, AIA
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    Redefining Context
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-11) Lockwood, Ian
    Ian Lockwood, P.E., is a Senior Transportation Engineer with the nationally recognized community-planning firm of Glatting Jackson. He is a pioneer and leader in the fields of context-sensitive design and traffic calming. Mr. Lockwood's work has won awards from the Institute of Transportation Engineers , the American Planning Association, and the American Society of Landscape Architects. He is well published and has been an expert panelist and speaker at conferences and seminars in the United States and abroad. Mr. Lockwood formally headed the City of West Palm Beach 's Transportation Planning Division, where he implemented community-oriented transportation policies to revitalize a challenged inner city. He also led some of the most comprehensive and attractive community-oriented street plans in the nation, and worked with developers to shelve their standard site plans in favor of urban versions. Mr. Lockwood has bachelor's and master's degrees in Civil Engineering from Carleton University in Canada.
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    The Design & Planning Process: Developing a Community Vision
    (Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006-05-11) McKinney, Ed ; Dagenhart, Richard
    Module 3 will present how successfully integrated land use and transportation projects actively involve local residents and business owners to take ownership of the project, ensuring its implementation. The module will demonstrate how the project team does not "design for" the community, but rather "designs with" the community. The session will demonstrate a successful model of community engagement and a successful approach to developing a community vision through stakeholder and partner agency participation. This comprehensive design effort moves beyond the traditional public information process and empowers local partnering public agencies and vested stakeholders to influence the transportation initiative and community design process. Instructors: Ed McKinney, AICP / Richard Dagenhart, AIA