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Abstract
RP-2005-02
Street-facing Dwelling Units and Livability: The Impacts of Emerging
Building Types in Vancouver's New High-density Residential Neighbourhoods
August 2005 / 28pp.
- Elizabeth Macdonald
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The city of Vancouver,
British Columbia, is building new high-density residential
neighborhoods around its downtown. Working within the context of
large-scale corporate development
projects, public sector planners are proactively shaping development
to be dense but also conform to notions of livability that derive from
traditional urbanism, such as ‘eyes on
the street’ and pedestrian scale. Design guidelines have
resulted in new building types that integrate ground-floor townhouses
into very large buildings. This
study analyzed how the new embedded townhouse forms are contributing
to life on the street and neighborhood
livability, using environmental measurements, behavior
observations, and surveys. The findings conclude that the embedded
townhouses do contribute to
livability, although other aspects of the building types and
neighborhoods may pose concerns.
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This is an electronic version of an article published in the Journal
of Urban Design,
copyright February 2005, Taylor & Francis
The Journal of Urban Design is available online at
http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp?id=p65m73383207728q
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