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Designing Places
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Newton Mearns, East Renfrewshire
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framework
Sometimes the necessary framework of planning and design policy and guidance
is missing
The fourth dimension
Urban design is often said to be a matter of working in three
dimensions, compared to the two dimensions of land use or policy planning. In
fact urban design should be four dimensional, the fourth dimension being time.
Master plans generally show an end state, even when continuous change is much
more likely.
We need to design and plan in the expectation that social, economic and technological
conditions will change. A development brief, for example, should be a basis
for dialogue between planners and developers rather than a prescriptive substitute
for it. Arrangements for long term management and maintenance is as important
as the actual design.
There should be scope for reviewing developments to assess how well the planning
process worked. Councillors should visit representative examples so that they
understand the consequences of the council's policies and their own decisions.
Planning and design guidance should itself be reviewed periodically to ensure
that it remains effective.
Much of what makes or mars cities, towns, villages and the countryside does
not just consist of buildings, but is the consequence of the continuous application
of, for example, highway standards (specifying the details of road design, signage,
safety measures and traffic calming) and planning standards (specifying such
matters as parking and the distance between buildings). Usually these are imposed
for reasons far removed from any considerations of design. Often, without anyone
noticing, places are shaped by the innumerable decisions that together can create
the overwhelming impression that no one cares.
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Culross, Fife
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Falkland, Fife
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