Design for Health's Planning Information Sheets link the research summarized in the Key Questions series to strategies for incorporating health into comprehensive plans. Below, we offer a few overall exemplary plans as well as links to some of the plans highlighted in our Information Sheets, organized by health topic. For more information about where certain health topics can be covered within the comprehensive plan, Design for Health offers a simple matrix to help you find your way.
King County , Washington
Rather than making a single Health Element, King County interspersed public health objectives throughout their 2004 plan update, particularly in the chapters on "Urban Communities" and "Transportation." In addition, it also includes a helpful contextual section discussing the link between physical activity, obesity, and how their planning and design strategies hope to influence some of these health issues.
Design for Health also features King County in its case study section.
Fremantle , Western Australia
The city of Fremantle 's Physical Activity Plan for 2005 to 2006 provides a framework and objectives to help the city plan, develop, implement, and evaluate physical activity programs and services. In addition to the separate plan, it recently developed an assessment tool to help communities address how new development projects will impact physical activity opportunities. Fremantle is also part of Design for Health's Plan case study section.
Boulder , Colorado : Transportation Master Plan
Multimodal planning is at the center of Boulder 's Transportation Master Plan, which is a supplemental document to the comprehensive plan. The master plan identifies 10 multimodal corridors, lists a series of goals for future improvements to the multimodal corridors, and identifies priority improvements for each of the four identified transportation modes that are roads, transit, pedestrians, and bicyclists.
Portland , Oregon : Pedestrian Master Plan
Portland, Oregon prepared a pedestrian plan to guide future walking infrastructure improvements and provide guidelines for designing the pedestrian realm. The document is notable for three inter-related elements: it establishes a set of priorities at the city scale; it engages the public through various participation methods; and it links to the City's capital improvement budget. It is also significant for recognizing that successful pedestrian environments depend on a variety of factors that includes destinations, attention to crossings, relationship with storefronts, and not simply putting in sidewalks where none exist.
City of Minneapolis, Minnesota : Local Surface Water Management Plan
The Local Surface Water Management Plan is a policy tool designed to combine management systems for sanitary sewers, storm drains and surface waters. The plan, which must also be approved by the regional governing body and the watershed district, contains sections on trends in water resource management, categorization of systems, identification of regulatory responsibilities, goals and policies, assessment and inventory of resources, and plan implementation—all of which inform the City on how to balance aging infrastructure and regulatory mandates in order to encourage storm water infiltration and reduce runoff.
Boulder, Colorado: Comprehensive Plan
The City of Boulder prioritizes multimodal planning within the transportation element of their comprehensive plan. It includes language on how to develop and balance an all-mode system that provides transportation choices, services, and facilities for people with mobility impairments, as well as youth, older adults, and low-income persons. This policy accompanies others such as multimodal strategies, reduction of single occupancy auto trips, system completion, and neighborhood design and integration.
Riverside California: General Plan
The City of Riverside, California has an air-quality element within its general plan. Riverside works to improve air quality through various strategies that target trip characteristics and green infrastructure, including: encouraging use of alternative fuels, improving the community's urban forest, promoting increased use of public transit, and reducing commuting, travel and vehicle-idling times. The element includes a comprehensive table with pollutant effects, federal and state standards, sources, and its health effects.
Tahoe Regional Planning Agency: Code of Ordinances
The Tahoe Regional Planning Agency (TRPA) in regulates development and establishes environmental regulations in the Lake Tahoe region. Its Code of Ordinances requires that any new development project that will create a significant increase in daily vehicle trips at the site, needs to prepare a technical analysis of potential traffic and air-quality impacts. The analysis includes: trip generation rates of the proposed project; impacts on regional vehicle miles traveled (VMT); impacts on regional and subregional air quality, and measures necessary to mitigate all traffic and air-quality impacts to a level consistent with environmental thresholds, the Goals and Policies, the Regional Transportation Plan, and the 1992 Air Quality Plan.
Batavia, Illinois: Comprehensive Plan
Batavia, Illinois, a small western suburb of Chicago with a population of 26,000, has an urban-design element within its comprehensive plan that looks at landscaping, design review, downtown character, and community spaces. One goal is to “use landscaping to soften new development, screen unattractive elements, minimize heat gain, and to provide relief from urbanization.” Policies include planting large trees to buffer parking lots and unattractive uses, and requiring developers to focus on vegetation and shade when designing outdoor spaces.
Sydney Australia Tree Master Plan
Sydney, Australia's tree master plan features key objectives, policy recommendations, the benefits of trees, and technical guidelines for three areas: their central business district, their suburban communities (inner-city residential areas), and their large industrial blocks. The plan includes provisions intended to reinforce and enhance the special characteristics of the three primary areas, using distinct street tree planting strategies and to establish green-city corridors by providing high-quality street trees.
Salt Lake City, Utah: Bicycle and Pedestrian Master Plan
The Salt Lake City Bicycle and Pedestrian Master Plan showcases a strong planning tool to facilitate the continued and orderly development of bicycle and pedestrian facilities and includes implementation strategies.
The plan is also sensitive to the regulatory environment, including improvements to the zoning code to consider such as: having codes for all street patterns that consider the needs of pedestrians and cyclists, addressing the negative impacts of minimum parking requirements on the pedestrian environment, and providing for infrastructure improvements (e.g., bulb-outs, street crossings) that address various safety considerations.
Kansas City, Missouri: Walkability Plan
The Kansas City , Missouri Walkability Plan is a comprehensive and innovative effort to determine pedestrian needs and demand, evaluate the pedestrian network and create new approaches to implement pedestrian-related facilities. Based on the concept of Pedestrian Level of Service Analysis, it presents a method that neighborhoods can use to conduct an evaluation of their pedestrian systems. Particularly notable is that the audit can be used by neighborhoods to communicate needs to city planning offices. The plan then recommends standards for different area types within the city and provides suggestions for prioritizing the areas with higher levels of pedestrian demand.
West Palm Beach, Florida: Comprehensive Plan
West Palm Beach has implemented a citywide traffic-calming program with a variety of treatments used in different settings. The Transportation Element of the Comprehensive Plan provides the policy basis for the traffic-calming improvements by identifying a number of traffic-calming efforts, including: vertical changes in the street (e.g., speed humps, speed tables, raised intersections), lateral changes in the street (e.g., chicanes, offset intersections, lateral shifts), constrictions (e.g., narrowings, pinch points, islands), narrow pavement widths (e.g., medians, edge treatments), entrance features, traffic circles, and small corner radii and related streetscapes (e.g., surface textures, edge treatments and colors, landscaping, street trees and furniture).
Tempe, Arizona: Urban Design Ordinance
The City of Tempe, Arizona has incorporated CPTED/SafeScape principles into their urban-design ordinance within the Zoning and Development Code. The section on development standards includes a chapter entitled “Landscape and Walls,” and provides design standards for landscape treatments with a stated purpose to create defensible spaces that also allow for natural surveillance.
Madison, Wisconsin: Comprehensive Plan
in its comprehensive plan, the City of Madison, Wisconsin includes objectives that support “compact, mixed-use activity (“town”) centers as “urban” alternatives to conventional suburban style, single-use, low-density office and research parks.” The plan includes a number of policies to support this objective including but not limited to: preparing detailed neighborhood development plans that include location criteria and design standards for mixed-use activity centers; adopting land development regulations that foster the development of compact, mixed uses; and mixed-use areas should be uniquely designed, easily discernible urban places.
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