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The Fredericton Design Charrette

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Title: The Fredericton Design Charrette


1
The Fredericton Design Charrette
Frank Flanagan City of Fredericton March, 2007
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What is a Design Charrette?
  • An illustrated brainstorming session involving
    diverse groups of experts and interested
    stakeholders meant to provide participants and
    the broader community with feasible creative
    solutions to pressing urban design problems.

3
What is the Purpose?
  • The purpose of this integrated design charrette
    was to create narrative and visual images for the
    West Hills Subdivision that demonstrate the
    principles and potential for designing a
    sustainable residential subdivision
  • Practical experience for stakeholders to link
    their expertise to sustainable development
    principles and the creation of concrete
    development options for the site
  • The charrette outcomes could test and change
    Official City Plan policies and provide the
    developers with a range of planning options and
    directions to be used in their future built
    projects

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What is the Purpose?
  • The purpose of this integrated design charrette
    was to create narrative and visual images for the
    West Hills Subdivision that demonstrate the
    principles and potential for designing a
    sustainable residential subdivision
  • Practical experience for stakeholders to link
    their expertise to sustainable development
    principles and the creation of concrete
    development options for the site
  • The charrette outcomes could test and change
    Official City Plan policies and provide the
    developers with a range of planning options and
    directions to be used in their future built
    projects

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Who Are the Participants?
  • CMHC funders and organizers
  • City Officials planning, engineering,
    transportation, recreation
  • Subdivision Owner, Developer, Builder
  • Consultants Land Use Planning, Engineering,
    Transportation, Landscape Architecture, Solar
    Energy, Geothermal Energy, Hydrogeology, Golf
    Course Architecture

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Who Are the Participants? (contd)
  • Federation of Canadian Municipalities
  • Natural Resources Canada
  • N.B. Dept. of Energy
  • N.B. Power
  • Mount Allison University
  • University of New Brunswick

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Why West Hills in Fredericton?
  • CMHC Officials were aware of Hill Brothers
    interest and experience in energy efficient
    housing (R2000/Enviro Home )
  • Hill Bros. were in the early stages of developing
    a large (400 acre) property for a mixed density
    golf course subdivision and expressed an interest
    in exploring energy efficiency further and the
    development of more sustainable residential
    subdivisions

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Why West Hills in Fredericton?
  • City officials were also receptive as they were
    in the process of undertaking a major review of
    its Municipal Plan and wanted to include policies
    embracing sustainable and energy efficient
    development
  • The City had also just completed a Master Plan
    for the Northwest Fredericton area which included
    the Hill Bros. West Hills property and were
    anxious to get on with plan implementation

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What was the Charrette Process?
  • Participants divided into three teams
  • Participants provided with information on the
    site, maps, sustainable development guidelines on
    the web site
  • Participants met for 2½ days

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What was the Charrette Process?
  • Day 1 meet greet meal, presentations on Plan
    Area, site concept plans, bus tour of site
    environs, QA session
  • Day 2 presentations on sustainable development
    strategies from experts in solar energy,
    watershed management, golf course design
    demonstrating that the charrette process could
    effectively change standard practices and
    translate sustainable development principles into
    concrete practical projects.

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What was the Charrette Process?
  • Day 2 (contd) teams discussed the principles
    of sustainable development and how to integrate
    them into actual development on the site under
    review, including the general site, the street
    layouts, lot layouts, house designs, golf course
    integration, livibility and quality of life in
    the subdivision.

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What was the Charrette Process?
  • Day 3 - Developed three revised subdivision
    layouts incorporating the objectives and
    principles discussed.
  • Presented the integrated design options to the
    whole group

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What was the Charrette Process?
  • Day 3 (contd) CMHC and Jacques Whitford
    compiled a report outlining the charrette
    process, objectives and results.

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The Sustainable Development Principles
  • Environmental protection and enhancement
  • Reduce the reliance on cars with linear trail
    links within the neighbourhood and to
    neighbouring communities/facilities
  • Energy efficiency
  • Economic Viability and marketability
  • Financial accountability
  • Listen to every voice in the design process
  • Quality of life, safety, connectedness, access to
    daily needs

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Recommended Elements Integrated into the Designs
  • Subdivision Design
  • Orientation of streets to take advantage of solar
    exposure
  • Design streets to reduce speeding motorists
  • Orientation of lots and/or houses (irregularly
    shaped lots)
  • Well landscaped rights-of-way

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Recommended Elements Integrated into the Designs
  • Housing
  • Mix of families, seniors, densities, ownership
  • Flex housing (incorp. life cycle changes over
    time)
  • Measures to reduce energy use, water consumption,
    waste disposal
  • Homes on slabs
  • Shared driveways
  • Low maintenance yards, lawns, more gardens
  • Solar orientation
  • Strategic tree/shrub planting (deciduous on
    south evergreens on north)

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Recommended Elements Integrated into the Designs
  • Movement
  • Reduce use of cars
  • Facilitate public transit through layout of
    streets
  • Provide for safe pedestrian/cyclist
    movement/bicycle racks
  • Provide trail, walking path linkages for internal
    and external facilities (shopping, clinic, golf
    course)

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Recommended Elements Integrated into the Designs
  • Golf Course
  • Integrate with storm water management
  • Base design on Terra Choice and Audobon
    environmental programs, integrate best management
    practices, focus on pesticide use, water
    wildlife conservation, green clubhouse
    construction (healthy materials, biological
    wastewater systems, renewable energy sources)
  • Address community needs shared use, meeting
    rooms, recreation facilities, parking lots,
    winter use, trail linkages
  • Take advantage of aesthetics/views

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Recommended Elements Integrated into the Designs
  • Environment
  • Emphasis on maintenance and preservation
  • Reduced use of chemicals on streets, lawns, golf
    course
  • Protection of watercourses for multi-use
    corridors
  • Reduce noise, air pollution
  • Use of natural native species
  • Use geothermal energy for heating
  • Retain wooded yards, plant gardens

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Recommended Elements Integrated into the Designs
  • Storm Water Management
  • Integrated with golf course
  • Retain natural drainage courses
  • Use of permeable materials on lots, driveways,
    lawns, trails
  • Low maintenance materials/landscape
  • Reduced pavement widths
  • Use of stormwater retention ponds as aesthetic
    features

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Recommended Elements Integrated into the Designs
  • Community
  • Address needs of all age groups housing,
    recreation
  • Shared facilities with golf course, clubhouse to
    enhance community interaction
  • Integrate community gardens, collect organic
    wastes/compost
  • Integrate parks, playgrounds, trails
  • Interpretive stations on trails/natural areas
  • Create live/work community

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Benefits/Lessons Learned
  • For Participants
  • Knowledge exchange, broadened outlook and
    appreciation, discussion of options, conflicting
    objectives, reaching compromises

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Benefits/Lessons Learned
  • For Developer
  • Benefit of free advice on how to design or
    redesign elements to integrate more sustainable
    development
  • How to meet sales, marketing challenges, public
    education while integrating more energy
    efficient, environmentally friendly and cost
    efficient development
  • Open to new ideas and change but cautious with
    respect to cost, market realities

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Benefits/Lessons Learned
  • For the City
  • Will integrate sustainable development policies,
    proposals into Municipal Plan Review and Zoning
    By-laws
  • Helps encourage consultants, designers,
    developers and builders to incorporate these
    lessons in their designs (key element)
  • Challenge of public education on need for and
    acceptance of changes
  • Results in more knowledgeable stakeholders
    consultants, developers, builders, residents,
    public, who will become more accepting and
    demanding of sustainable development practices

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Questions?
Amen !!
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