Monday, May 26, 2008

Draft 2 – Franklin Avenue Planning Core Values – May 21, 2008

Here is the next draft of the core values the Franklin Avenue Planning Task Forces have been working on. Feel free to get involved in the discussion at any of the Task Force meetings or at the SNG Board Meeting/Pot Luck on Wednesday, May 28 at Matthews Center.
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Good Design
We envision Franklin Avenue as a well designed place that reflects the urban character of the Seward neighborhood.
  • Buildings, signage, landscaping and other elements of the streetscape should be human scaled, urban, green, artful, easily maintained, safe, graffiti resistant and durable.
  • Time, energy and resources should be invested to design (not just produce) elements of our streetscape. We are willing to invest in design while keeping it affordable for everyone.
Multi-Modal Movement
We envision Franklin Avenue as an active, interesting and safe place for all pedestrians.
  • We want Franklin to be a destination that draws people from both inside and outside the neighborhood. Franklin should be easy to access by bus, LRT, bike or car. Once people arrive in Seward, it should be intuitive that non-motorized transportation is the preferred mode between destinations on the Avenue and in the neighborhood.
  • For people in the neighborhood, biking, walking and public transit are primary modes of transportation. We should make changes to the Avenue so that pedestrians, bikes, wheelchairs, strollers, skateboarders, etc. have a safe and pleasant experience so they can use all of the parks, restaurants, shops and other resources on Franklin.
  • The LRT area and the 3-4 blocks east of it are unique. Seward wants to develop a chain of attractions or complimantary commercial activity that extend the Franklin Avenue business district and the identity and feel of our community all the way to the LRT station area.
Identity
We envision Franklin Avenue as a destination that draws people into our unique neighborhood.
  • Franklin Avenue is our Main Street / Town Center and should express the character of Seward as a whole. Key elements of our identity include that we are culturally diverse, arts-aligned, green, urban, welcoming, student-friendly, safe, comfortable and accessible.
Local Sourcing
We envision Seward as a place where a strong local economy and grass-roots activism meet.
  • Decision Making – our community is organized, well-informed and committed to leading decision making and implementation of changes in our neighborhood.
  • Shop locally – Seward residents and business owners use our dollars to support local businesses. Supporting these businesses helps them support the community.
  • Work/employ locally – Encourage employers to hire local talent; create opportunities for people who live in the neighborhood to find a local job; and create ways for people who work in the neighborhood to find a place to live in the neighborhood.
  • Connectivity – . We will work to attract new core businesses that meet community need, desire, and match our values. but also draw people from outside our neighborhood. We, in turn, should be good neighbors to our neighboring neighborhoods by supporting their destination businesses.
Stewardship and Safety
We envision Franklin Avenue as a well-cared for and well maintained place where people can gather throughout the day and into the evening during all seasons.
  • Businesses and other destinations along the Avenue should be connected by neighborhood gathering places where neighbors can have eye-to-eye contact, where community conversations happen and where the seeds of community activism grow.
Seward is Green
We envision Franklin Avenue as a place that contributes to the environmental health of both our neighborhood and the world.
  • Literally – Franklin needs more trees, plants and landscaping – in addition to contributing to the health of the environment, these things make Franklin a more comfortable and attractive place year round.
  • Buildings – Buildings should contribute to the environmental health of our neighborhood through reduced energy consumption, on-site storm and waste water management, reuse and recycling of materials and other green technologies.
  • Infrastructure - Seward does not want the City or County to tear up and replace our infrastructure but instead to explore ways to improve through the repair/reuse existing infrastructure whenever possible.
  • When making decisions about amounts of parking, lighting or other factors that impact the environment, we should always strive to have “just enough.”

Thursday, May 22, 2008

Franklin Planning Newsletter

We are publishing a weekly Franklin Planning Newsletter. You can find PDF versions of them here:
Page 2 has some great information on one of the terms we keep hearing about--TOD or Transit Oriented Design.

Draft Core Values

Last week the Task Forces worked on a common set of core design values starting with the DRAFT below. Expect to see the revised set within a couple days

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DRAFT CORE VALUES--FRANKLIN AVENUE PLANNING

Good Design

  • Buildings, signage, landscaping and other elements of the streetscape should be artfully designed to reflect the character of Seward. To do this, time, energy and resources should be invested to design (not just produce) those elements.
Multi-Modal Movement
  • People from outside the neighborhood (who will most likely arrive by car, LRT, bus or bike) should easily be able to get to Franklin. Once here, it should be intuitive for visitors that arrive by car to park and then walk around the neighborhood.
  • For people in the neighborhood, biking, walking and public transit are primary modes of transportation. We should make changes to the Avenue so that pedestrians, bikes, wheelchairs, strollers, skateboarders, etc. have a safe and pleasant experience so they can use all of the parks, restaurants, shops and other resources on Franklin.
Identity

  • Franklin Avenue is part of the Seward neighborhood, the main street and our front door. Franklin’s identity should express the character of Seward as a whole. Key elements include that we are culturally diverse, arts-aligned, green, a destination, safe, comfortable and accessible.
Local Sourcing
  • Decision Making – our community is organized, well-informed and committed to leading decision making and implementation of changes in our neighborhood
  • Shop locally – Seward residents and business owners use our dollars to support local businesses.
  • Work/employ locally – Encourage employers to hire local talent; create opportunities for people who live in the neighborhood to find a local job; and create ways for people who work in the neighborhood to find a place to live in the neighborhood.
Stewardship and Safety
  • Franklin Avenue should look well-cared for and have well maintained places where people can gather. These neighborhood gathering places are active throughout the day and into the evening, where neighbors can have eye-to-eye contact, where community conversations happen and where the seeds of community activism grow.
Seward is Green

  • Literally – Franklin needs more trees, plants and landscaping – both because these things make Franklin a more comfortable and attractive place and also because they contribute to the environmental health and sustainability of our neighborhood and the world.
  • Buildings – Buildings should contribute to the environmental health of our neighborhood through reduced energy consumption, on-site storm and waste water management, reuse and recycling of materials and other green technologies.
Infrastructure
  • Seward does not want the City or County to tear up and replace our infrastructure but instead to explore ways to repair/reuse existing infrastructure whenever possible.

Friday, May 16, 2008

Local Business/Gateways Task Force- Week 1 May 16

Vision & Values activity and discussion

This group’s emphasis was on the following areas:

Identity
  • A strong, well articulated, positive identity
  • PR/Advertising as part of identity
  • Making it comfortable
  • Express our identity in a way that attracts people from all over as well as the neighborhood
  • Franklin as a part of Seward
  • Shaking the ‘bad rap’
  • Events that reinforce the neighborhood sense of identify
Locally owned Business
  • Asset to the livability of the neighborhood
  • Attracting shoppers who then may end up wanting to work or live here
  • No franchises, no big box!
  • Diversity
Safety
  • Evening activity
  • Lighting and activity and windows
Parking
  • Balance the need for parking, the perception that we need parking, residents feeling that they don’t want commercial parking in front of their homes, successful commercial district
  • Making parking areas attractive and SAFE
Connections
  • River as a way to connect to Franklin through the neighborhood
  • Connecting the neighborhood, local businesse3s, destination businesses and Franklin.
  • Multi-modal access – more bus access, more service from the #8
  • Gateways and landmarks
Green construction/sustainability
  • A central value of the community
Destination Businesses
  • Accessibility, east access
  • Making people feel comfortable
  • Having a good reputation
  • River

Community Engagement / Crime & Safety Task Force - Week 1 May 14

Vision and Values Discussion:

Public Safety – creating a safer community, that brings people out, that creates a safer community, that…

Engaging local businesses to create events and activities that make it safer.

Stewardship/maintenance – leading by example- demonstrate that we care

Locally Owned Businesses
  • No franchises
  • Events and activities that celebrate our businesses and bring people together
  • Business Vitality
Time – lighting at night, night experience

Public spaces designed to draw people in

Movement Task Force - Week 1, May 13, 2008

Vision & Values activity and discussion

This group’s emphasis was on the following areas:

Locally Owned Business
  • Basic goods and services should be available in the neighborhood – within walking distance for residents
  • Nice to be able to walk/bus from one errand to the next (trip-chaining)
  • Businesses should match community needs
  • It would be nice if businesses had bus schedules available
  • No big boxes
Sense of Place
  • Bus stops could be a gathering place – shelters/kiosks/other amenities at bus stop
Identity
  • Pedestrians and bus riders have opportunity to interact with each other (conversation) – sense of community
  • Signage is important
Public Safety
  • More people on street going to businesses makes a place safer (cyclic … more pedestrians improves safety, more safety means makes more pedestrians, repeat)
  • Pedestrian traffic (and public transit) is more sustainable and is inclusive of different economic status (don’t need to own a car)
  • Safer pedestrian/car interactions
  • Need increased visibility near LRT
Multi-Modal Access / Destinations / Accessibility
  • Want Franklin to be a destination for people inside and outside the community; however, avoid BYOC (Bring Your Own Car) … want more people to arrive by foot, bike and bus
  • Improve public transit – this allows more people to come without cars,
    • #8 and #7 bus need more service (no bus service to new co-op location on weekends)
  • For those who do arrive by car, we want them to park once they arrive, and walk between destinations in the neighborhood
    • Parking and wayfinding should be intuitive
  • Events like the walks are good because they get people out on the street, walking together – we could use more events like this
  • Lots of accessibility issues near new Co-op locations
Public Spaces
  • Franklin Avenue is a public space, not just a place to move cars – bikes and pedestrians should take a sense of ownership over the street – have places to stop and interact
  • Can parking areas be public spaces? (ex. – “Mall” by Walker Library in Uptown)
  • Discussion about edges/boundaries
Connections
  • Enhance/incorporate LRT with other systems … peds/bikes/buses
  • Better connection to adjacent neighborhoods
  • Better connection and wayfinding to other locations in our neighborhood (eg, Matthews Park)
Accessibility
  • Needs improvement – lots of issues near
Parking
  • Parking areas could be better designed … more green
Ease traffic flow / noise / speed
  • We don’t see Franklin as a thoroughfare or reliever for the highway … promote destination traffic instead of through traffic
  • Landscaping and transitions as you enter the neighborhood could help slow traffic

Visual Identity / Landscape Task Force - Week 1, May 12, 2008

Vision & Values activity and discussion

This group’s emphasis was on the following areas:

Sense of Place / Arts / Identity / Locally Owned Business
  • businesses arts and identity all help create a sense of place
  • the many arty things in our neighborhood help make Seward a destination
    • artists have openings in their homes
    • Joan of Art, Cabooze, Northern Clay, Blue Nile, Coastal Seafoods, Bluegrass at 2nd Moon, Hoffman Guitars
    • The art crawl is great … more of them? More often?
  • Local businesses should line both sides of the Avenue
    • No big boxes
    • Welna Hardware is a great precedent – anchors its corner with its scale, colors etc.
  • Want to be known as a walking community
  • We need to think about what our core identity is – is there a verbal reference? A logo?
  • Places on Avenue should have character, not be cookie-cutter (like MetroPlace)
  • now, our neighborhood is beautiful and has a sense of place … once you leave Franklin
  • Extend the outdoor season (eg, blankets at restaurants for outdoor seating, shield wind with trees, etc.)
Public Spaces
  • Friendly, well-maintained/clean and inviting neighborhood gathering places where people meet, socialize, site and become neighbors
  • How do we plan for gathering places?
  • Some elements: no litter, artistic trash cans, painted phone poles, drinking fountains for people and dogs
Destinations
  • A compelling/alluring place (destination) for people in and outside our community to come for art, food, rest, etc … all thins cultural, green and edible
  • Destination requires easy access, including: bike parking, bus service & shelters, car parking, walkability, LRT access, public transportation in general
  • Want to fell like a place where you want to go

Trees / Green Spaces / Green Construction / Sustainability
  • This is a core value of our community
  • Use trees and green spaces to make Franklin more inviting, safer, softer, more comfortable and cleaner for walkers and bikers – so that the community walks in all seasons
    • Solar street lights – focus light on sidewalk / pedestrians
  • Buffering
    • use clumps of small trees (birch?)
    • ex – at new co-op, trees between sidewalk and road and between sidewalk and parking lot
Connections / gateways
  • visual consistency / continuity throughout the corridor
    • use art at both ends of Franklin and throughout
    • should not seem forced
  • improve pedestrian and retail connections to LRT / LRT bike trail
Consistency
  • We don’t want everything to be the same, but we do want it to all be well-maintained

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Join a Franklin Planning Taskforce

The task forces are ready to go. The task forces will help develop a piece of the vision for Franklin Avenue, write recommendations, and suggest summer test projects.

Each will have five meetings that will start the week of May 12 and go through mid-June. All the meetings will be at the SNG/Seward Redesign offices, 2323 East Franklin Avenue (at the back of the building). The days and times are:

  • Visual Identity / Landscaping – Mondays at 6:30 PM
  • Movement-Tuesdays at noon
  • Community Involvement/Crime and Safety- Wednesdays at 6:30 PM
  • Local Business Vitality/Gateways- Fridays at 8:30 AM
If you are interested in participating and didn't sign up at Saturday's meeting, if you would like to participate but these times don't work for you (we are still working on the best times for people), or if you just want to find out more about the task forces, email Emily Wergin at Seward Redesign at emily@sewardredesign.org or call her at 612/338-8729.