INFORMING DESIGN CHARRETTES: Tools for participation in neighbourhood-scale planning

Authors

  • Cynthia L. Girling University of British Columbia

Keywords:

decision support tools, public planning process, design charrettes, sustainable development

Abstract

The authors have been developing computer-based decision support tools to bring education, visualization and modeling to design charrettes (design-oriented participatory community planning events) and other design-oriented public workshops. These tools have been created to engage the public together with professionals in community planning and design. One goal of the work is to close a challenging gap in knowledge and understanding between professionals and stakeholder groups charged with generating and evaluating planning alternatives. Design charrettes are well supported by qualitative, design-based participatory methods that engage the public, such as with visioning and brainstorming techniques that draw out aspirations and preferences about future growth. In order to achieve more sustainable models of urban form, charrettes must also be supported by quantitative, analysis-based methods that model and evaluate performance against indicators of sustainable development such as housing density, and access to transit and services. Central to the authors’ decision support tools is a multimedia database of measured parcel scale case studies entitled ELEMENTS OF NEIGHBOURHOODS (EoN). When linked to land use plans through a Geographic Information System and related applications, these tools help a community visualize, measure and compare competing alternatives in areas of land use, transportation, environmental quality, infrastructure and cost. With tools such as these it is possible to equitably compare alternative plans through visualization and measurement based upon the schematic design descriptions and information generated by charrette-based planning process. This paper identifies the need for informed, time-sensitive public decision-making in community planning, introduces the design charrette as one effective method, introduces the authors’ decision support tools designed to close three gaps in knowledge, methods and scale when applied to the design charrette, and reviews two applications of these tools.

Author Biography

Cynthia L. Girling, University of British Columbia

Associate Professor, Landscape Architecture Program, School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture

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Published

2006-12-29

Issue

Section

Articles