Street Design -  Victor Dover,  John Massengale

Street Design (eBook)

The Secret to Great Cities and Towns
eBook Download: EPUB
2013 | 1. Auflage
416 Seiten
Wiley (Verlag)
978-1-118-41594-8 (ISBN)
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'The best streets in the world's villages, towns, and cities-whether modest or grand-continually remind one that simplicity is part of the recipe for success in this art. The advice of Victor Dover and John Massengale, their historic examples and their own designs, reflect that simplicity.'
-From the Foreword by HRH The Prince of Wales

'Street Design is a lucid, practical and altogether indispensable guide for envisioning and creating vibrant 21st century towns and cities. It should be required reading for every local political leader, planner, architect, real estate developer and engaged urban citizen in America.'
-Kurt Andersen, host of Studio 360 and author of True Believers  

'We are going to start walking around the places we live again, and as that occurs and becomes normal, we will rapidly redevelop a demand for higher quality in building at the human scale.'
-From the Afterword by James Howard Kunstler

'Your charrette traveling library must include the important Street Design book by Victor Dover and John Massengale.'-Bill Lennertz, Executive Director,  National Charrette Institute

'What an amazing resource!  For those who wish that my book, Walkable City, had pictures, this is the book for you.  If either your work or your play includes the making of places, you will find Street Design to be an invaluable tool.' -Jeff Speck, AICP, CNU-A, LEED-AP, Hon. ASLA

Written by two accomplished architects and urban designers, this user-friendly street design manual shows both how to design new streets and enhance existing ones. It offers step-by-step instruction and shares examples of excellent streets, examining the elements that make them successful as well as how they were designed and created. Topics also include strategies for shaping space in the public right-of-way through correct building height to street width ratios, terminated vistas, landscaping, and street geometry. This book is a valuable resource for urban designers, planners, architects, and engineers.

With guest essays from: Kaid Benfield, David Brussat, Javier Cenicacelaya, Hank Dittmar, Andres Duany, Douglas Duany, Emily Glavey, Chip Kaufman, Ethan Kent, Marieanne Khoury-Vogt, Léon Krier, Gianni Longo, Thomas Low, Laura Lyon, Chuck Marohn, Paul Murrain, John Norquist, Stefanos Polyzoides, Gabriele Tagliaventi and Erik Vogt.



Victor Dover, FAICP, is cofounder of Dover, Kohl & Partners Town Planning based in Coral Gables, Florida, a design practice focused on restoring healthy neighborhoods as the basis for sound communities and regions. He is former national chair of the Congress for New Urbanism (CNU) and lead designer of more than 150 neighborhoods, urban revitalization programs, and regional plans across the United States and abroad.

John Montague Massengale, AIA, is an architect and urban designer in New York City. He is a board member of the CNU, which has been called 'the most important phenomenon to emerge in American architecture in the post-Cold War era' and a former Director of the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art. With Robert A. M. Stern, he was coauthor of New York 1900: Metropolitan Architecture and Urbanism 1890-1915 and The Anglo-American Suburb.


"e;The best streets in the world's villages, towns, and cities whether modest or grand continually remind one that simplicity is part of the recipe for success in this art. The advice of Victor Dover and John Massengale, their historic examples and their own designs, reflect that simplicity."e; From the Foreword by HRH The Prince of Wales Street Design is a lucid, practical and altogether indispensable guide for envisioning and creating vibrant 21st century towns and cities. It should be required reading for every local political leader, planner, architect, real estate developer and engaged urban citizen in America."e; Kurt Andersen, host of Studio 360 and author of True Believers "e;We are going to start walking around the places we live again, and as that occurs and becomes normal, we will rapidly redevelop a demand for higher quality in building at the human scale."e; From the Afterword by James Howard Kunstler Your charrette traveling library must include the important Street Design book by Victor Dover and John Massengale. Bill Lennertz, Executive Director, National Charrette Institute What an amazing resource! For those who wish that my book, Walkable City, had pictures, this is the book for you. If either your work or your play includes the making of places, you will find Street Design to be an invaluable tool. Jeff Speck, AICP, CNU-A, LEED-AP, Hon. ASLA Written by two accomplished architects and urban designers, this user-friendly street design manual shows both how to design new streets and enhance existing ones. It offers step-by-step instruction and shares examples of excellent streets, examining the elements that make them successful as well as how they were designed and created. Topics also include strategies for shaping space in the public right-of-way through correct building height to street width ratios, terminated vistas, landscaping, and street geometry. This book is a valuable resource for urban designers, planners, architects, and engineers. With guest essays from: Kaid Benfield, David Brussat, Javier Cenicacelaya, Hank Dittmar, Andres Duany, Douglas Duany, Emily Glavey, Chip Kaufman, Ethan Kent, Marieanne Khoury-Vogt, L on Krier, Gianni Longo, Thomas Low, Laura Lyon, Chuck Marohn, Paul Murrain, John Norquist, Stefanos Polyzoides, Gabriele Tagliaventi and Erik Vogt.

Figure 1.1: Broad Street, New York, New York. Looking north on one of the main streets in New York City’s financial district around 1905. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Detroit Publishing Company Photograph Collection, LC-D4-33881

 

 

CHAPTER ONE

INTRODUCTION

Our streets and squares make up what we call the public realm, which is the physical manifestation of the common good. When you degrade the public realm, the common good suffers.

—James Howard Kunstler

 

 

THE DESIGN OF CITIES begins with the design of streets. To make a good city, you need good streets, and that means streets where people want to be. Streets need to be safe and comfortable, they need to be interesting, and they need to be beautiful. They need to be places.

We often think of buildings when we think of urban design—as we should. Great streets require great buildings. Good streets can get by with merely good buildings; great or merely good, the art of architecture is clearly indispensable. But streets are the spaces between the buildings, and those spaces need the art of placemaking. Placemaking makes the street spaces into settings where people want to be. A place is not a place until there are people in it.

We’ll look at great streets in this book and explore what made them great places. Most of them are beautiful, and so it is important to point out that the cliché about beauty being in the eye of the beholder is wrong: we all intuitively know beautiful places when we experience them. If we walk through an arcade in Venice and come out in the Piazza San Marco, no one has to tell us that this is a profound and uplifting experience. There can also be a great deal of beauty in everyday experience, as we see on many “ordinary” Main Streets in American small towns. When the buildings and trees lining the street give it a sense of enclosure, and the proportions and details form a harmonious whole, Main Street becomes a place where we want to linger, sharing a common experience with our neighbors and fellow citizens.

Tragically, we rarely build streets like that today. The overwhelming majority of the streets in America have been built since World War II, and most of them were built for cars rather than people—like the six-lane arterial road in the middle of nowhere lined with strip malls, shopping malls, big box centers, and the other detritus of modern suburban life (Figure 1.2). These cheaply built, poorly designed sites and buildings do not feel like authentic places to us: there is no there there.1 The roads are what the writer James Howard Kunstler calls “auto sewers”—suburban “thoroughfares” sized by engineers to make the traffic flow like water in a pipe. Sometimes it seems more like sludge in a sewer pipe.

Figure 1.2: An “auto sewer” arterial that, except for the palm trees, could be Anywhere, USA. “The road is now like television, violent and tawdry. The landscape it runs through is littered with cartoon buildings and commercial messages. We whiz by them at fifty-five miles an hour and forget them, because one convenience store looks like the next. They do not celebrate anything beyond their mechanistic ability to sell merchandise. We don’t want to remember them. We did not savor the approach and we were not rewarded upon reaching the destination, and it will be the same next time, and every time. There is little sense of having arrived anywhere, because everyplace looks like noplace in particular.” —James Howard Kunstler, The Geography of Nowhere.

Not surprisingly, the streets that result look as though they were made for cars. No one walks on them if they can possibly avoid it (Figure 1.3). The problem with these streets is not just their location, far from anything except other shopping centers and big box stores. Their design and construction are bad for people, too. The scale is vast and frightening, speeding cars roar by, there are large swales where the sidewalk should be, and crossing the street is difficult, with long expanses between traffic lights. Even when you get to your destination, you still have to cross a large parking lot that has no sidewalks or shade trees. It’s all ugly, and it’s all depressing.

Figure 1.3: A placeless cul-de-sac: a residential auto sewer in Anywhere, USA. Image courtesy of Megan McLaughlin

Fortunately, after decades of fleeing cities and old towns, Americans have embraced walkable towns and neighborhoods again. There’s a common understanding that the automobile-based patterns of building made a physical environment inferior in many ways to the old pedestrian-based one, and that we need to remake our cities, towns, and streets for people. Accordingly, the Federal and local governments are appropriating billions of dollars in a well-intentioned—yet scattered and intermittent—effort to rebuild the nation’s roads.

Less encouraging is that many of the professionals involved in remaking our streets bring with them the criteria and biases of their specialties, and that frequently prevents them from designing streets where people want to be. Bicycle specialists, pedestrian specialists, transit specialists, and even Complete Street specialists may understand the need to add a bike lane or a streetcar, but they often don’t understand placemaking or the importance of the public realm. The professionals in charge usually continue the late-twentieth-century pattern of allocating most of the square footage there primarily to the motor vehicle and its movement—now with the movement of bicycles and buses added. They introduce innovations that make the street safer for those riding bikes or even traveling on foot, but at the same time they repeatedly diminish the space and beauty of the street for the walker. And when you diminish the public realm, you diminish the common good.

THE TRADITIONAL STREET

The history of urban design and street design in Western civilization has its roots in ancient Rome and Athens. For the Greeks and the Romans, the city was the place where men and women came together to make a good and civilized life. The words “civil,” “civilization,” and “citizen” come from the Roman word for city, “civitas.” From the ancient Greek word for city, “polis,” we get “polite,” “political,” and “police,” which reflect the classical idea that the city was a political body of citizens, as well as the place where they politely came together to create civilization. For centuries, the first job of the architect when designing a new building was to make or reinforce the public realm (Figure 1.5).

Figure 1.4: Old New York Police Headquarters, 240 Centre Street, New York, New York. Hoppin & Koen, 1905–1909. “The boldest conception of civic art makes it embrace not merely individual groups of buildings with their approaches and gardens but even entire cities. It is one thing to distribute fine groups of public buildings over the area of a city and to connect them effectively. It is a much more difficult thing to relate the entire city to such a scheme.”—Werner Hegemann and Elbert Peets, American Vitruvius: An Architects’ Handbook of Civic Art.

Figure 1.5: Paris, France. An aerial photograph of the Right Bank from the early twentieth century. The Church of the Madeleine is at the center, and the place de la Concorde below.

Ancient Romans talked about the public realm, which they called the res publica, as the place where the citizens came together in the polis. It was shaped by the buildings in the private realm (res privata). In The Architecture of Community, the architect and urban designer Léon Krier uses diagrams to show that each realm is incomplete without the other, while the two combine to make the complete city (Figure 1.6).2 In addition to open space (streets and squares and parks), the public realm also includes public buildings such as churches and town halls. Much of the art of traditional urban design and town planning consists of two things: shaping and programming the public realm into a place where pedestrians want to be, and strategically placing public buildings (such as a market or place of worship or theater) so that they are understood to be more important than the private buildings (Figure 1.4).

Figure 1.6: The True City. Léon Krier, 1983. To be complete, the city needs to have both a public realm and a private realm. Image courtesy of Léon Krier

In the modern world, we also have the semipublic domain of stores, businesses, and places of entertainment, such as movie houses, restaurants, and nightclubs. Office buildings now frequently tower above the church steeples that used to be the tallest structures, and corporate headquarters like the Chicago Tribune Tower or the Woolworth Building in New York are distinguished from speculative office buildings by their monumentality and ornate architecture. All these buildings play a large part in making urban places where people want to be. Some of these spaces were meant to inspire a sense of grandeur; others were designed to be intimate. Most...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 31.12.2013
Vorwort James Howard Kunstler
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Geowissenschaften Geografie / Kartografie
Technik Architektur
ISBN-10 1-118-41594-9 / 1118415949
ISBN-13 978-1-118-41594-8 / 9781118415948
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