An
Impressive 'Smart Growth' Summit
By Ronald E. Roel
September
27, 2002
It was an impressive scene: an overflow crowd of more than 500
planners, real estate lawyers, architects, developers and public
officials assembled at the 2002 "Smart Growth Summit"
last week at the Huntington Town House.
The mood of
the summit, hosted by Vision Long Island, a nonprofit, Northport-based
organization aimed at advancing smart-growth principles, was one
of audacious optimism.
Ron Stein,
the president of Vision Long Island, called the smart-growth approach
a "triple win" for homeowners, developers and local
communities. The principles underpinning the movement, Stein said,
encompassed the building of "compact, mixed-use" residential
and commercial developments, keeping in mind the needs for open
space and quality-of-life issues. Smart- growth initiatives aim
to involve the public in decision-making, protect and revitalize
downtowns, redevelop blighted retail areas and create variably-priced
housing for the workforce. And for good measure, it aims to address
a "loudly resounding complaint" among local residents
about ugly architecture, while not becoming the "aesthetics
police."
The stakes
were high, Stein said. The voices of NIMBYism (not in my backyard)
had reached a new decibel level, with a new acronym: BANANA, or
build absolutely nothing anywhere near anybody.
The summit's
keynote speaker, nationally known planner and retail specialist
Robert Gibbs, said he was surprised by the turnout. "I've
never seen so many elected officials in one room," said Gibbs,
president of Gibbs Planning Group, a Michigan-based consulting
organization. Long Island, he told me in a phone interview several
days later, is "one of the most ready communities in the
country" for smart growth.
"I think
there's a good buzz out there," said Brookhaven town board
member Edward Hennessey of East Moriches, a summit participant
and an enthusiastic supporter of smart growth.
For many areas,
"redevelopment is the most attractive option, because we're
running out of land," Hennessey said. "There are real
significant opportunities to capture public participation. It
gives increased value to the land. ... It's really a developer's
dream."
Well, not
every developer agrees. During one presentation at the summit,
one real estate professional handed me his business card with
a note scribbled on the back: "Smart growth is frightening!"
Later, by phone, he questioned whether officials could reconcile
the region's need for affordable housing with advocates' "insatiable
desire" for open space.
If anything,
he said, smart growth required government, more than the private
sector, to "reconsider what it's thinking" about regional
development.
Actually,
it was this last point that Gibbs made disarmingly clear, in a
style that combined his expertise with the delivery skills of
a stand-up comic.
Gibbs, who
asserts that "all the moons are aligned" for retailers
to return to the downtowns of small communities, tweaked the audience
with comments like this: If you're creating a plan for a new town
center - which should include housing, commercial spaces, retail
stores and civic areas, add an "e" and make it a "towne"
center and "that will get you two more votes on the planning
board."
"E"
or no "e," officials like Hennessey say that centers
of development are already being conceived to replace the congested
corridors and strip malls in places such as a 1.7-mile stretch
of Montauk Highway in the Mastic-Shirley area.
"We've
used the visioning process with the community," Hennessey
said, "and we're looking to create three separate nodes of
development ... to create town centers, parking, streetscapes
[pedestrian-friendly designs that provide easy access to retailers
from the street]." Officials hope to change zoning codes
by the end of the year "and effect change in two to five
years - instead of waiting for 20 years."
For more information
about the conference and follow-up events, contact Vision Long Island
(631-261-0242; www.visionlongisland.org). And for more about the
world according to Gibbs, contact him at Gibbs Planning Group (248-642-4800;
www.gibbsplanning.com).
Copyright © 2002, Newsday, Inc.
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