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Why plan for growth and change, when it seems so much easier to simply react? When there is a distinct and shared vision for your community - when residents, businesses and local government anticipate a sustainable town with cohesive and thriving neighborhoods - you have the power to conserve your beautiful natural spaces, enhance your existing downtown or Main Street, enable rural areas to be productive and prosperous, and save money through efficient use of existing infrastructure. This is the dollars and sense of smart growth. Success is clearly visible in Maine, from the creation of a community-built senior housing complex and health center in Fort Fairfield to conservation easements creating Forever Farms to Rockland's revitalized downtown. Communities have options. We have the power to manage our own responses to growth and change. After all, “Planning is a process of choosing among those many options. If we do not choose to plan, then we choose to have others plan for us.” - Richard I. Winwood And in the end, this means that our children and their children will choose to make Maine home and our economy will provide the opportunities to do so. The Summit offers you a wonderful opportunity to be a part of the transformative change in Maine that we’ve seen these gatherings produce. We encourage you to consider the value of being actively involved in growing Maine’s economy and protecting the reasons we choose to live here.
Citation preview
Portland’s Complete Streets Policy
Portland Planning Division
Portland Department of Public Services GrowSmart Maine Summit
October 21, 2014
Complete Streets Policy – Overview
Full consideration of all users, of all ages and abilities • Funding • Maintenance • Planning • Design • Construction • Operation
• Not ‘one size fits all’
• Reflects the context of a street
• Network / System oriented (not just individual streets)
Complete Streets: 10 Policy Elements Adopted by the Portland City Council in Dec. 2012
1. Vision
2. All Users / All Modes
3. Applies to All Projects
4. Exceptions
5. Network / Connectivity
6. All Agencies / All Roads
7. Design Standards &
Guidelines
8. Community Context
9. Performance Measures
10. Implementation
Vision
“The goal is to create a connected
network of facilities accommodating
each mode of travel that is consistent
with and supportive of the local
community, recognizing that all streets
are different and that the needs of
various users will need to be balanced
in a flexible manner.”
Excerpted from Portland, Maine’s
Complete Streets Policy
Libbytown Circulation
Study Area
PACTS Libbytown Circulation Study Preferred Alternative: Two-way Congress St at Marston/Frederic St
June 6,2013 DRAFT Source: Terrence J. DeWan & Associates.
Existing
Proposed
PACTS & City of Portland, ME
PACTS Libbytown Circulation Study Preferred Alternative: Two-way Park Ave at Marston St/Hood Dairy
June 6,2013 DRAFT Source: Terrence J. DeWan & Associates.
Existing
Proposed
PACTS & City of Portland, ME
Complete Streets: Implementation
THE Key to Success – Specific Next Steps • Evaluate and Revise Manuals & Practices
• Develop Design Policies and Guidelines
• Provide Training
• Improve & Update Performance Measures
Next Steps
Existing Portland Technical Manual
• Only applied to new construction
• Inflexible and subject to waiver requests even then
Next Steps:
Design Standards - A context-sensitive approach
Tacoma, WA Street Typologies Main Street
Next Steps
‘Level the Playing Field’ in the Planning and Design of Streets
A B C D E F
A B C D E F
A B C D E F
A B C D E F
Multimodal Level of Service
? ? ?
Develop Quality of Service
Ratings for all modes
Complete Streets Planning & Design Manual
Working Outline - DRAFT
I. Introduction A. Purpose & Background (Portland’s CS Policy, What are Complete Streets (& Incomplete Streets), Why Complete Streets, etc)
B. How to Use this Manual C. Complete Streets Planning & Design Principles (Safety, Connectivity, Balance competing needs, All users/all abilities, etc)
II. Portland’s Street Planning & Design Process A. Types of Applicable Projects (paving projects, signal projects, striping, sewer/utility projects, reconstruction, sidewalks, etc.)
B. Who’s Involved and How? (Roles & Responsibilities)
C. State & Regional Context (PACTS, MaineDOT, Federal – FHWA & FTA, etc)
D. Local Context E. Portland’s Project Delivery Process (How projects get done – funding, planning, design, construction, maintenance, operation)
III. Portland’s Street Types A. Major Street Types (7) Defined – see attached - others TBD (shared streets, alleys, etc) B. Overlay Maps – Transit Routes and Bikeways C. Design Treatments Matrix – see attached example from Philadelphia CS Manual
IV. Complete Streets Zones and Design Treatments A. The Composition of a Complete Street – the Street Zones – see B. below B. Design Treatments Building/Urban Design Zone Sidewalk/Furnishing Zone Travelway-Vehicle Zone Intersections & Commercial Nodes
V. Implementation & Enforcement A. Project Checklists B. Measuring Success C. Performance Measures D. Changes to Ordinances and Technical Manual
Portland’s Major Street Types
Variations in/Combinations of:
• Pedestrian ‘Significance’/Volumes
• High / Medium / Low
• Motor Vehicle ‘Significance’/Volumes/Function
• High / Medium / Low
• Local – Collector – Arterial/Regional
• Land Use & Characteristics
• High Density – Medium Density – Low Density
• Retail – Commercial – Mixed Use - Industrial
Portland’s Major Street Types
Downtown Mixed Use Street
Neighborhood Connector Street
Neighborhood ‘Main Street’
Urban Neighborhood Residential Street
Neighborhood Residential Street
Commercial / Industrial Street
Commercial / Retail Street
Shared Street
Portland’s Major Street Types - Examples
Downtown Mixed Use Regional-Neighborhood Connector
Neighborhood ‘Main Street’ Commercial / Retail Street
Formalizing our Complete Streets Process(es)
‘Projects’/Activities From a Wide Variety of $ources
• Private Development
• Federal & State Funds & Processes –
PACTS/MaineDOT/DEP/EPA/FHWA/FTA/CDBG
• Sidewalks/Pathways/Paving/Bikeways/Transit /Sewer
separation-Stormwater/Intersections/Street reconstruction/Curb
ramps
• Local Funds & Processes – CIP/Operations Budget
• Sidewalks – Spot Repair,Rehab & New, Striping, Traffic Signal,
Sewer
• Utilities – Gas/Water/Electric, etc
How Do We Capture All these Activities w/o an
Over-burdensome Process?
Formalizing our Complete Streets Process(es)
What Do Other Cities Do?
• Project Checklists
• Formal ‘Roles & Responsibilities’ Assigned
• Complete Streets Project Flowcharts
Formalizing our Complete Streets Process(es)
What Do Other Cities Do? Project Checklists Building Permits/Zoning
ROW
City Plan
Formalizing our Complete Streets Process(es)
What Do Other Cities Do? Roles & Responsibilities
Formalizing our Complete Streets Process(es)
What Do Other Cities Do? Process Flowcharts
Philadelphia
Formalizing our Complete Streets Process(es)
What Do Other Cities Do? Process Flowcharts
Chicago
Formalizing our Complete Streets Process(es)
Complete Streets & Retrofitting for Mobility Bicycling Facilities – Have We Been Missing the Mark(et)?
Source: Roger Geller, Portland, OR
Complete Streets & Retrofitting for Mobility Portland, Maine – Evolving Bikeway Network
Complete Streets & Retrofitting for Mobility Portland, Maine – Evolving Bikeway Network
Bike Lane Shared Lane
Shared Use Pathway
Neighborhood Byways / Bicycle Boulevards
• Lower speed / lower traffic streets that provide good connectivity
• Local, residential streets (primarily) – often need traffic calming - street crossing
• Typically serve younger and / or less confidant cyclists
• Also to serve pedestrian, traffic speed management, and livability goals of neighborhoods – Safe Routes to School
• Appeals to much broader ‘Transportation Cyclist’ market
,OR
Source: City of Portland, OR.
Complete Streets & Retrofitting for Mobility Bicycling Facilities – Hitting the Mark(et)?
Neighborhood Byways - Local Streets Prioritized for Biking and Walking
Complete Streets & Retrofitting for Mobility
Arterial
Streets
Neighborhood
Centers
Portland, Maine – Neighborhood Byway Pilot
Complete Streets & Retrofitting for Mobility
Contra-flow Bike Lane Pavement Markings
Safe Routes to School Elements Destination & Wayfinding Signs
Arterial/Collector Bikeways Bike Lanes Existing: 10 miles Shared Lanes Existing: 3 miles Planned: 38 miles
Neighborhood Byways Existing: 5.5 miles Planned: 22 miles
Shared Use Pathways Existing: 8 miles Planned: 6 miles
Bikeway Network Implementation
Complete Streets & Retrofitting for Mobility