Planning the cities of the future
Bryce Alderton
Huntington Beach heads into the 21st Century with a new attitude and
new designs that will set the precedent for how structures are built and
what they look like.
The city’s Planning Department will receive an Award of Excellence for
Planning Implementation/Large Jurisdiction next month at the 2001
California Chapter of the American Planning Assn.’s Awards of Excellence
ceremony held in Sacramento.
Huntington Beach Planning Director Howard Zelefsky said the city
deserves and expects “high-quality design.â€
“[High-quality design] helps development and tourism,†Zelefsky said.
Zelefsky has been with the planning department for 20 years and said
it’s the first time Huntington Beach has received a state award for
planning since he’s been with the city.
The city council adopted the urban design guidelines Sept. 5, 2000.
The urban design guidelines, prepared by the city’s planning department,
set specific criteria that the city will use in designing and building
all new structures.
The guidelines focus on residential, commercial, and industrial areas.
Included within these areas are Downtown/Main Street, office
buildings, service stations and car washes, hotels, drive-through and
drive-in businesses, sign and public art, road medians, wall designs and
street furniture.
“We’re going to try to get art in public places that we never used to
get, and look at such things as landscaping in parking lots, which is
important,†Zelefsky said.
Some examples of these guidelines will be decorative paving used at
driveway entries and pedestrian walkways, crosswalks in residential areas
and an emphasis on California and Mediterranean landscapes and gardens in
commercial areas.
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