"Talk to any developer in Los Angeles and they’ll tell you
that the development process in the city is uncertain to
the extreme and often a disincentive to smart growth.
Hoping to cure the city’s development process of its bureaucratic inefficiencies,
City Council President Eric Garcetti has proposed the “12 to 2” plan.
In the following TPR (The Planning Report) interview,
Council President Garcetti describes the type of good planning that L.A.
needs and how his proposal will help rebuild the city’s neighborhoods."
that the development process in the city is uncertain to
the extreme and often a disincentive to smart growth.
Hoping to cure the city’s development process of its bureaucratic inefficiencies,
City Council President Eric Garcetti has proposed the “12 to 2” plan.
In the following TPR (The Planning Report) interview,
Council President Garcetti describes the type of good planning that L.A.
needs and how his proposal will help rebuild the city’s neighborhoods."
An excerpt from the interview on "smart growth";
TPR- Before David Zahniser moved from L.A. Weekly to the
L.A. Times, he wrote a strong indictment of the language
and hype around smart growth in L.A. What is your reaction
to his analysis of the evolution of the term “smart growth”?
L.A. Times, he wrote a strong indictment of the language
and hype around smart growth in L.A. What is your reaction
to his analysis of the evolution of the term “smart growth”?
Garcetti - I don’t disagree with Zahniser that smart growth has,
in many cases, become all things to all people—that it is too broadly
and too loosely used.
In reaction, we can confirm that what we’ve had in the last two decades has really been,
in many cases, dumb growth.
We’ve added people to the region without planning for it,
and we’ve pretended that if we didn’t build anything, folks wouldn’t come.
We know, however, that over the next two decades, most of our growth will be indigenous.
Two-thirds of our population increase in the region will be
from people who are already here having children.
I try to focus on the content of good,
neighborhood-oriented development,
because the average person doesn’t know what smart growth means,
nor should they because it’s been used
in so many different ways.
They do know that they need a dry cleaner down the street.
They know that they need a store that they can walk to
instead of having to get into the car and be stuck in traffic.
They do know it would be nice to make friends
by riding a bike to a local café where they can sit on a sidewalk
that is pedestrian-friendly and safe.
There was also a piece by Sharon Bernstein in the Los Angeles Times
about transit-oriented development and how not enough people
who live near public transit actually use it.
We do need to reach a tipping point where people will continue to embrace transit options.
But it’s not just about people discarding their car.
The car is too much a part of Los Angeles’ culture and
too much of what we need to navigate the very complex terrain here.
But when you look at the car trips we take,
only one out of three of them is for our commute to and from work.
What we have to do as a city is provide options to people for the other two trips,
whether that is meeting up with friends at a movie or a trip to visit somebody for a lunch meeting
—that people can actually take a couple car trips off of
the street each week because they have such options
as walking, the subway, the bus, neighborhood circulators
like our DASH buses, or bicycles.
In my office, every employee has to carpool,
take public transit, walk, or bike to work once a week. It’s not a big sacrifice,
but in doing so we can quantify how many hundreds of miles of trips
we’re taking off the street each week and how many pounds of carbon we take out of the air.
Those are the sorts of good planning responses
that I would say are needed for a reaction to “smart growth.”
in many cases, become all things to all people—that it is too broadly
and too loosely used.
In reaction, we can confirm that what we’ve had in the last two decades has really been,
in many cases, dumb growth.
We’ve added people to the region without planning for it,
and we’ve pretended that if we didn’t build anything, folks wouldn’t come.
We know, however, that over the next two decades, most of our growth will be indigenous.
Two-thirds of our population increase in the region will be
from people who are already here having children.
I try to focus on the content of good,
neighborhood-oriented development,
because the average person doesn’t know what smart growth means,
nor should they because it’s been used
in so many different ways.
They do know that they need a dry cleaner down the street.
They know that they need a store that they can walk to
instead of having to get into the car and be stuck in traffic.
They do know it would be nice to make friends
by riding a bike to a local café where they can sit on a sidewalk
that is pedestrian-friendly and safe.
There was also a piece by Sharon Bernstein in the Los Angeles Times
about transit-oriented development and how not enough people
who live near public transit actually use it.
We do need to reach a tipping point where people will continue to embrace transit options.
But it’s not just about people discarding their car.
The car is too much a part of Los Angeles’ culture and
too much of what we need to navigate the very complex terrain here.
But when you look at the car trips we take,
only one out of three of them is for our commute to and from work.
What we have to do as a city is provide options to people for the other two trips,
whether that is meeting up with friends at a movie or a trip to visit somebody for a lunch meeting
—that people can actually take a couple car trips off of
the street each week because they have such options
as walking, the subway, the bus, neighborhood circulators
like our DASH buses, or bicycles.
In my office, every employee has to carpool,
take public transit, walk, or bike to work once a week. It’s not a big sacrifice,
but in doing so we can quantify how many hundreds of miles of trips
we’re taking off the street each week and how many pounds of carbon we take out of the air.
Those are the sorts of good planning responses
that I would say are needed for a reaction to “smart growth.”
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