Title: THE COSTS OF SUBURBAN SPRAWL AND URBAN DECAY
1THE COSTS OF SUBURBAN SPRAWL AND URBAN DECAY
2What is Suburban Sprawl?
Sprawl is unsustainable development that wastes
tax dollars, destroys farmland and open space,
and neglects existing infrastructure and
community resources.
3Everything is a Drive Away
Suburban parents spend17 full days a
yearbehind the wheel, more than the average
parent spends dressing, bathing and feeding a
child. Source Surface
Transportation Policy Project
Schools
Shops
Home
Recreation
Workplace
4About Grow Smart RI
- Statewide non-profit organization
- Diverse coalition of interests
5Mission
- Promote patterns of development that
- - Revitalize city town centers
- - Preserve historic, cultural and natural
resources - - Expand economic opportunity for all Rhode
Islanders
6How We Get it Done
- Research / Education
- Policy Reform / Advocacy
- Building municipal capacity
7The Costs of Sprawl and Urban Decay in
Rhode Island
Published December, 1999
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9Rhode Island Growth Trends1980-2000
- Population growth 6.9
- Housing growth 17.2
- Motor vehicle growth 16.4
10Increase in developed land1961-1995
- Core 54 increase
- Ring 122 increase
- Suburb 169 increase
- Rural 205 increase
11Costs of Sprawl
- Loss of farms and forestland
- 1964-1997 farmland reduced by half
- Potential additional loss by 2020
- 3,100 acres farmland
- 24,000 acres forestland
- Infrastructure Costs
- Roads
- School facilities
- Utility lines
12Social Costs
Poverty in Core Cities
13Loss of jobs from core cities
14Fiscal Impacts on Urban Centers
- Lost Tax Revenue
- Estimated loss in assessed valuations
- 1.3 billion
- 1998 934 acres of vacant lots in Providence
- 8 of citywide acreage
- 1999 560 vacant buildings in Providence
15Urban Fiscal Impacts
- Reduced property values
- Increasing tax rates
16Fiscal Impact on suburban and rural towns
- Increased taxes due to
- Increased cost of community services due to
amount of growth - Increased cost of community services due to
pattern of growth
17Other Impacts
- Increased motor vehicle usage negative
environmental impacts - Increased storm water runoff from roads and
parking lots - Increased auto emissions
18Calculating the Costs
- Current pattern net gain of 25,000 new housing
units from 2000-2020 - 34,000 units -- ring/suburban/rural
- - 9,000 units urban
- 25,000
- (RI Statewide Planning Projections)
19- Alternative Core Development pattern
- 8,750 new units in Urban Core and Ring
- 6,250 new units in Suburban
- 10,000 new units in Rural
- 25,000 new units
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21How can communities grow smart?
- Encourage growth development in existing city
and town centers - Mix land uses
- Create a range of housing opportunities and
choices - Foster walkable close-knit neighborhoods
- Preserve protect open space, farmland,
critical environmental areas - Provide a variety of transportation choices
22- Promote a distinctive sense of place through
preservation - Take advantage of existing community assets
- Make development decisions predictable, fair and
cost-effective - Encourage citizen participation in development
decisions
23What Smart Growth Is And Is Not
More transportation choices and less traffic
Not against cars and roads
Vibrant cities, suburbs and towns
Not anti-suburban
Wider variety of housing choices
Not about telling people where or how to live
Not against growth
Well-planned growth that improves quality of life
24www.growsmartri.com
345 South Main Street Providence, RI
02903 273-5711 Jflaherty_at_growsmartri.com