The Importance of New Urbanism in Orlando, Florida
The following post comes courtesy of Global Site Plans' The Grid. CNU and Global Site Plans recently teamed up to syndicate Grid content, as its contingent of writers presents a view on the opportunities and issues of urbanization all across the world. CNU will carry select posts from the Grid direct on the CNU Salons.
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Florida is a state of dichotomies. Even after a decade of explosive population growth, much of the Sunshine State remains very rural. Coastal cities like Miami are home to the international super-rich, while just blocks away you can find families struggling to make ends meet. And, maybe most surprisingly, Florida – a state known in urban planning textbooks as the epicenter for sprawl and the real estate crash – is home to the nation’s most important New Urbanist developments.
Why is New Urbanism important? While this development theory is constantly adapting and improving, it has been used by planners and architects to counter the current trend of sprawling development by creating environmentally and socially sustainable neighborhoods.
Early developments like Seaside (the city from The Truman Show) andCelebration (originally developed by The Walt Disney Company) have been criticized as being little more than vacation enclaves or manufactured communities. New developments, however, are pushing the envelope to become environmentally friendly, affordable, and, most importantly, real. Here are three examples from Orlando, Florida:
1. Hampton Park, Orlando
Hampton Park looks like your typical southern neighborhood from days gone by with its tree-lined streets where every house has a front porch. What you don’t realize is that a portion of this clever mix of single-family houses, townhomes, apartments, and live-work units is actually set aside for office space, low and moderate-income housing, and apartments for the elderly.
2. Baldwin Park, Orlando
For a primer on pre-WWII architectural styles in Florida, visit the mixed-use neighborhood of Baldwin Park. Taking advantage of Lake Baldwin as a terminus for the development’s town center, this project turned over 1,000 acres of abandoned military training facilities into a walkable neighborhood with 450 acres of parks.
3. Avalon Park, Orange County
Avalon Park in southeast Orange County embraces its suburban location by designating over 8,000 acres of its site as a natural preserve that integrates with the protected lands around it.
For more information on these and many more projects, take a look at A Guide to New Urbanism in Florida.
Do you think New Urbanism is an effective strategy to combat sprawl?
To read the original post, written by Alex Lenhoff, visit Global Site Plans.
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