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Evaluating Land Use and Transportation Plans


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#1 Icebergalley

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Posted 05 February 2007 - 11:04 AM

I'll start this new topic with a press release relating to the tools that Island Trust has started to use to show the value of various density and travel choice strategies... Would be interesting to see the results of such an evaluation for projects here..

LAND-USE & TRANSPORTATION PLANNING THAT MEASURABLY REDUCES
GLOBAL WARMING
Feb 02, 2007 -- Criterion Planners
http://www.planetize... ... =1341&rf=e


Press Release

Land-Use & Transportation Planning That Measurably Reduces Global Warming
U.S. and Canadian communities using INDEX software to demonstrate lower CO2 emissions from denser mixed-uses and multi-modal travel.

Feb 02, 2007

As the need for climate change action grows, communities across North America are examining the greenhouse gas emissions embedded in their land-use and transportation plans. The building densities and circulation systems in these plans determine energy needs and emissions for decades into the future, and modeling CO2 emissions of alternative plans is helping local officials find more sustainable solutions for community growth.

In Canada, the Islands Trust of British Columbia has selected INDEX to model the global warming effects of the Salt Spring Island growth plan near Vancouver. The tool will estimate emissions for three scenarios: business-as-usual under current plan build-out, versus growth in distributed hamlets or central villages. INDEX estimates CO2 emissions from energy use in buildings and the amount of driving produced by land-use patterns.

In California, INDEX has been used by the City of Chula Vista since 2001 to evaulate the climate change impacts of proposed development projects. The city used the tool to establish CO2 reduction standards that development projects are measured against, including minimum levels of use mix, neighborhood completeness, walkability, and transit coverage. The program won U.S. EPA's Climate Change Protection Award in 2003.

"We see thousands of pounds of CO2 reduction per capita annually in neighborhoods planned for denser mixed-uses and multi-modal travel," says Eliot Allen of Criterion Planners, "and these reductions last for decades because of the permanence of the built environment."

INDEX is a suite of GIS tools for assessing community conditions, designing future scenarios, and evaluating outcomes with environmental indicators and stakeholder goals. Introduced in 1994, INDEX is now the most widely-distributed planning support software in North America.

Related Link: INDEX Planning Support Software

For more information contact:

Eliot Allen
Criterion Planners
725 NW Flanders St., Suite 303
Portland
OR 97209
U.S.


Phone: 503-224-8606
Fax: 503-224-8702
Email: mailto:eliot@crit.com
Web: http://www.crit.com



#2 G-Man

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Posted 05 February 2007 - 11:22 AM

Wow this looks like a cool tool. Are we sure that the CRD is not already using this?

Here is the PDF link

[url=http://www.crit.com/documents/INDEXintroduction.pdf:719fe]Click[/url:719fe]

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It has a whole new look!

 


#3 G-Man

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Posted 05 February 2007 - 11:29 AM

I would kill to be able to play around with that program for awhile. Its like SimCity on steroids. I like the options ability so that you can show two projects on the same piece of land and then the software will model the effects of both on the wider community.

So you get six licenses for each copy of the program anyone want to pool together to buy it only like 320 each of course the training program is another 1500 bucks a person not including airfare. :smt080

Visit my blog at: https://www.sidewalkingvictoria.com 

 

It has a whole new look!

 


 



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