|
Unlike
other aspects of daily life and work, the act of planning our communities
requires an understanding of complex and sometimes counterintuitive processes
that unfold over long periods of time. This may be one reason why, in
our fast-paced world, the discipline of planning as it is widely practiced
has not kept pace with progress in other areas, most notably, science
and technology.
Effective decision-making related to planning requires considerable learning
on the part of both professionals and citizen-stakeholders. Since much
of our individual learning comes from direct personal experiencein
other words, feedback from a range of situations and actionsits
often difficult to understand the slowly evolving consequences of planning
in everyday terms.
For this reason, it is important for citizens to use tools to gain a greater
understanding of the way planning decisions affect us over time. To this
end, many of the tools in this presentation act to compress time. For
example, a computer simulation can show the maturing of 50-year-old trees
in just a second, or alternative scenarios for the growth of a region
25 years forward can be generated in response to different variables suggested
by a live audience.
Other tools enable citizens to see their recommendations turned from thought
to design within hours. This rapid response helps to achieve public consensus
for innovative plans. Still other tools allow citizens to see that there
may already be broad consensus around desired models of growth in their
community, even when that model is of higher density than surrounding
neighborhoods.
Most importantly, computer tools help citizens plan sustainable communities.
The complex problems shared by cities throughout the United States are
evidence of the impacts of urban sprawl: increasing traffic congestion
and commute times, air pollution, inefficient energy consumption and greater
reliance on foreign oil, loss of open space and habitat, inequitable economic
resource distribution, and the loss of a sense of community. Community
sustainability requires a transition from poorly managed sprawl to land
use planning practices that create and maintain efficient infrastructure,
ensure close-knit neighborhoods and sense of community, and preserve natural
systems.
An efficient infrastructure means resource and energy-efficient buildings,
transportation systems and industrial processes. Energy supply and use
is an integral part of a communitys economic and environmental infrastructure.
Energy conservation and efficiency have multiple benefits. They create
jobs, lessen dependence on foreign oil supplies, and reduce air, water
and soil pollution. They also help communities retain their wealth through
energy savings money normally sent to the utility company stays
within the communitys economy. The decision-support tools listed
on this website/CD ROM weave together information about energy use, natural
resources, pollution, economics, social demographics, physical design,
and pollution.
In all of these cases, tools help shorten the feedback loops essential
to the process of regional learning. This is a process that I believe
citizens, professionals and elected officials will find stimulating and
rewarding.
--Peter Katz
NEXT
|
|
 |