Public invited to comment on Raleigh's draft comprehensive plan
This week Raleigh released for public review the draft of 2030 comprehensive plan guiding the city's development. The Planning Department will take comments from the public through Jan. 31.
City officials held a public forum at the Convention Center Wednesday evening to unveil the 380-page document, drawing a substantial crowd.
The News & Observer reports that the plan takes aim at sprawl, calling for the city
to funnel 60 percent of its growth over the next two decades -- about 72,000 residential units -- to downtown, seven urban centers and a number of major road corridors.City Councilors Russ Stephenson and Thomas Crowder shared some preliminary thoughts with the Independent Weekly:
Crowder liked the plan's "general framework," which emphasizes sustainable development patterns, coordinating land uses and transportation options, and curbing sprawl. He questioned, though, whether the specific policies it proposes are strong enough to achieve its visionary objectives ...Stephenson raised concerns about whether the city's plan to create seven "urban centers" in addition to downtown -- West Raleigh, Crabtree Valley, Cameron Village, Triangle Town Center, Brier Creek and New Bern/ Wake Med -- would homogenize development in those very different areas.
But Crowder wondered whether the "balance" struck in the existing plans between density "bonuses" for developers and the contextual quality standards they were supposed to meet to obtain them has been lost in a drive to build bigger in older neighborhoods.
For a copy of the draft, more on the approval process, and supporting documents, click here.
Labels: comprehensive plan, development


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