8/27/12 draft
Manheim Park
Development Strategy Kansas City, MO
August 27, 2012
Table of Contents
chapter 1
Introduction 1
How to Use This Document Existing Plans and Ongoing Initiatives
03 04
chapter 2
Development Concepts
Green Impact Zone Concept Manheim Park Neighborhood Concept Bancroft Activity Center Concept Incremental Steps Flexible Housing Mix Key Design Strategies
9
12 14 16 18 20 22
chapter 3
Perfomance Guidelines
Building Sustainably Diverse Housing Options Cultural Heritage and Neighborhood Fabric Open Space and Public Space Physical Infrastructure Access to Jobs and Services Safe and Healthy Living Integrated Services and Amenities Capacity Building, Skill Training, and Workforce Development Coordination of Development, Infrastructure, and Services
23
26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44
chapter 4
Process Framework
Development Stakeholders and Relationships Engagement Process Development Process
47 48 50 52
INTRODUCTION | 1
chapter 1
Introduction
Introduction Since its inception in 2009, the Green Impact Zone has increased the capacity of neighborhood organizations, coordinated policy action, and facilitated development and infrastructure investments with the vision of transforming the neighborhoods within the Zone (roughly bounded by 39th Street to the north, 51st Street to the south, Troost Avenue to the west, and Prospect Avenue to the east) into vibrant, green, and healthy urban places. Already, the impacts of this effort are quite visible, ranging from the weatherization of homes, to improvements in neighborhood safety, to the creation of a “Smart Grid” to facilitate renewable energy opportunities. The Bancroft School redevelopment project is one of the most prominent examples of the transformative potential of the Green Impact Zone’s efforts. With the rehabilitation of the historic Bancroft School building, construction of new residential units, commitment to high performance green design, and integration of community spaces and services into the development program, the compelling vision of the Bancroft project is already attracting new interest in investment and development in the Manheim Park neighborhood and in the Green Impact Zone more broadly. Through the active work of the Green Impact Zone and other partners, there is currently a concentration of developer interest, community development activity, neighborhood participation, and City investment in the Manheim Park Neighborhood. This document, the Manheim Park Development Strategy, provides a set of tools that can help to coordinate these diverse efforts in a way that maximizes their impact, supports the vision of the neighborhood, fulfills the promise of the Green Impact Zone principles, and builds the capacity of residents and community organizations alike. Toward that end, this document has three components:
Development Concepts Development concepts illustrate how development and infrastructure investments can occur in a coordinated fashion that meets the needs of the neighborhood and positions individual projects to benefit through integration with a long-term strategy. Conceptual development plans connect proposed land uses, key catalyst projects, infrastructure investments, potential amenities, and other opportunities at a range of scales. These plans also show potential development phasing, and priority areas for development. Performance Guidelines The purpose of performance guidelines is to align public and private investment with the goals of the neighborhood and Green Impact Zone, particularly for expectations and opportunities that are not place specific and cannot be illustrated through the development concepts. neighborhood association Housing Commitee The performance guidelines connect broad principles to specific strategies, techniques, and development solutions that can be applied to individual projects. Green Impact zone
Process Framework The process framework outlines how everyone involved in the development of the Manheim Park neighborhood can relate to each other. It clarifies how, when, and with whom conversation and collaboration might occur to both encourage and facilitate development, and also to achieve the desired performance standards in the Green Impact Zone and the neighborhood.
INTRODUCTION | 3
How to Use This Document This document is intended to be useful to different audiences at various points of the decision-making process for investment and development in the Manheim Park neighborhood: Neighborhood Organizations The Manheim Park Development Strategy is a tool to assist residents in achieving the neighborhood transformation they desire. The strategy focuses on the Manheim Park neighborhood initially, but it has potential application and replication throughout the Green Impact Zone. The development concepts illustrate how the neighborhood vision can be translated to a physical development scheme. In conversations with potential developers and service providers, performance guidelines communicate how the vision and guiding principles for the neighborhood can be applied in specific development concepts. The process framework helps to clarify the neighborhood’s role in reviewing and facilitating proposed development within the neighborhood.
City Within the Green Impact Zone, the City of Kansas City has an opportunity to pilot a new model of integration and coordination between departments to provide higher quality services and strategically leverage infrastructure investments to maximize their potential impact on the area. With development concepts that identify strategic nodes and catalysts for development, and performance guidelines that illustrate opportunities for integrated approaches to services, energy, stormwater, and transportation, the Manheim Park Development Strategy will begin to establish a path for more integrated and strategic service delivery. The process framework also outlines how the City works with the neighborhood, developers, and the green impact zone to facilitate and regulate the development process.
Green Impact Zone The Green Impact Zone has established a vision and guiding principles to shape the transformation of the neighborhoods within the Green Impact Zone boundaries. The Manheim Park Development Strategy establishes a series of tools to ensure that the development within the Zone is coordinated with the broader goals of the Green Impact Zone, and that the Zone can effectively engage with developers, community organizations, and neighborhoods to ensure that efforts are coordinated to achieve maximum impact.
PRivate and Community Developers With ongoing efforts by the Green Impact Zone and the redevelopment of Bancroft School, there is already an emerging interest from private developers and community development organizations to participate in the transformation of the Manheim Park Neighborhood and capitalize on the focused investment and energy that already exists. The Manheim Park Development Strategy is a tool to provide guidance to interested developers about the broader development vision for the neighborhood and to help focus and coordinate development activity in a strategic way that leverages existing and proposed investments.
Existing Plans and ongoing initiatives Over the last four years Manheim Park Neighborhood residents have engaged in planning for a vibrant future. In 2008, Brush Creek Community Partners, a local community development organization actively involved in the Green Impact Zone, sponsored a community dialogue culminating with a Vision document that clarified neighborhood values and goals and identified some key strategies to achieve the goals. The vision for the Manheim Park neighborhood is as follows: An interconnected community empowered by the people supporting the health and well-being of all residents valuing attractive homes and vibrant businesses united around a common goal for a restorative future.
The Green Impact Zone’s support, engagement around the Bancroft school redevelopment project, and charrettes facilitated by APD Urban Planning and Management to explore housing strategies in Manheim Park and other neighborhoods have built upon the foundation established in this Visioning process to advance the goals of the neighborhood. The Bancroft development and design team engaged the Manheim Park neighborhood five times over a period of four months in 2011 to receive informed feedback on the community needs that can be addressed by the Bancroft School project and partnerships. Meanwhile, APD also engaged Manheim Park and other neighborhoods in the Zone to inform the overall housing plan, branding, and land use strategies. This extensive dialogue has helped to establish a community vision for the future of the neighborhood and a large body of public input that guides the work described in this document.
This word cloud represents the topics discussed during the Manheim Park Healthy Neighborhood Initiative community meetings. The larger the word, the more often it was mentioned. Credit: wordle.net
INTRODUCTION | 5
Manheim Park Healthy Neighborhood Initiative: In addition to the vision, the Manheim Park Healthy Neighborhood Initiative established the following goals: Goals • Safety: Build a community where neighbors know each other, where children can be seen playing outside and where public spaces are safe 24 hours a day. • Business: Increase the diversity and quantity of local businesses and entrepreneurship opportunities and ensure that necessary amenities can be purchased within the neighborhood. • Community: Reinvent connections between neighborhoods to establish an equitable place where neighbors greet each other on the street with a smile and where strong neighborhood associations collaborate to establish a social support network. • Education: Nurture a community where children can be seen walking to and from neighborhood schools, safely crossing back and forth across Troost Avenue, a place where adult literacy and joblessness are improved through education and training opportunities, and where local universities become an integral part of the community because students and faculty live, work, learn, and volunteer in adjacent neighborhoods. • Transportation: Increase pedestrian activity throughout the neighborhood. • Maintenance: Establish and implement a high level of property maintenance that creates an attractive and welcoming environment for residents, businesses, and visitors. • Housing: Create a neighborhood of well-maintained houses filled with attentive and invested occupants. • Parks: Create a fun and safe gathering space for the neighborhood. Provide amenities for park visitors and clean up existing property.
Cover of the Manheim Park Health Neighborhood Initiative Vision Document.
The community crafted a vision for Manheim Park through a series of public meetings.
Green Impact Zone The Green Impact Zone is an office of the Mid America Regional Council (MARC) started in 2009 and funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The programs that this office oversees were conceived by Congressman Emanuel Cleaver II to foster sustainability in a designated area of 150 blocks in the core of Kansas City, Missouri. This national model of resilience is responsible for weatherizing homes, connecting transportation routes, stimulating entrepreneurship, cleaning up blighted properties, working with police and neighborhood associations to make safer places, and streamlining processes for residents to report problems and achieve solutions. The Zone has also been the vehicle for Kansas City Power and Light to implement a Smart Grid pilot project for increased efficiency and seamless integration of local renewable energy sources. The Green Impact Zone works with a coordinating council, made up of neighborhood leaders and other partners, to implement the strategies that will transform the community. These partners include neighborhood, housing, workforce development, energy, health, safety, transportation, and other organizations in addition to a variety of local government entities and City departments.
Celebrating the ribbon cutting of the new Troost Avenue Bridge.
Green Impact Zone Vision and Guiding Principles: The Green Impact Zone has established the following vision: To develop a sustainable community; one that is environmentally, economically and socially stronger tomorrow than it is today...using a comprehensive green strategy...coordinated programs with innovative delivery mechanisms...and intense resident engagement...to more rapidly push community change, build community capacity, and make the Green Impact Zone a place where people want to live, work and play.
The work to realize the vision of the Green Impact Zone will be guided by these principles: • The work will be inclusive, consisting of resident participation and representation, community accountability and transparency. • The work will be effective, achieving the outcomes listed above, being responsive to community desires, having noticeable impact on resident lives and the community, and building organizational and community capacity. • The work will be efficient, leveraging resources, strategically using resources, fiscally accounting for resources, and using data to make decisions. • The work will complement and enhance existing neighborhood goals and activities. • The work will cross-pollinate ideas, programs and people to enhance the ability of people inside and out of the Green Impact Zone to learn from the programs and policies. • The work will be evidence-based, using information and data to evaluate the effectiveness of activities and adjust program design. • The work will be targeted so that each block sees significant improvement to lives, homes and community assets.
INTRODUCTION | 7
Green Impact Zone Housing Plan (APD) In 2011, the Green Impact Zone hired APD Urban Planning and Management LLC as a consultant to develop a housing plan for the Zone, including the Manheim Park neighborhood. APD has experience in developing residential, mixed-use, and mixed-income projects in urban neighborhoods. The housing initiative led by APD included public meetings in Manheim Park and other neighborhoods to discuss housing challenges, opportunities, and community preferences. This initiative also produced detailed analysis of property ownership, housing conditions, development opportunities, ongoing community development efforts, and available community services. All of this information provides the foundation for the work in this document and will inform the proposed development concepts.
One of the public meetings to explore how the Bancroft school can meet community needs.
Bancroft School Redevelopment The Bancroft School is a historic elementary school built in 1909 in the heart of the Manheim Park neighborhood that residents have identified as critical to the transformation of the neighborhood. The Bancroft School was a functioning elementary school until 2000 and was sold to a private investor in 2009. A private developer now has the building under contract and is working with a team including the Make It Right Foundation (a housing non-profit started in New Orleans to rebuild homes following Hurricane Katrina) and other partners. The redevelopment plan includes converting the existing school building into 29 units of housing with an additional 21 new construction units built on the site for a total of 50 units. The developer successfully pursued Federal and State Low Income Housing Tax Credits (LIHTC) for the financing of the project. As a result, the apartments will be marketed as affordable housing for families and individuals. The Bancroft School redevelopment team has committed to green technology and design strategies, including the pursuit of LEED Platinum designation, on-site energy generation, and capture and cleaning of rainwater for reuse. As the Bancroft project approaches construction, the development team is also coordinating with the Green Impact Zone and community organizations to create a workforce development plan that provides training and skill development for area residents, employment opportunities on the project itself, and capacity building for community organizations.
chapter 2
Development Concepts
Development concepts The following development concepts illustrate how physical development in the Manheim Park neighborhood can achieve the neighborhood vision and support Green Impact Zone principles. These development concepts include maps and diagrams at several scales ranging from community-wide connections and influences throughout the entire Green Impact Zone and beyond, to land use and infrastructure strategies in the Manheim Park neighborhood, to detailed development opportunities around the Bancroft school redevelopment area specifically. The development concepts are intended to illustrate a clear vision for future investment and development within the neighborhood, and to function as a tool to leverage and align opportunities that exist within the neighborhood and entire Green Impact Zone.
Downtown KCK
Downtown Loop Crossroads
18th & Vine
Union Station
Midtown Hyde Park Westport Nelson Plaza Atkins
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The Green Impact Zone in context of Kansas City, Missouri.
UMKC
Green Impact Zone
StaDiums
DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS | 11
Green Impact Zone Concept The Green Impact Zone Concept integrates major potential catalyst projects, critical connections, and priority investment areas onto a single map that clearly demonstrates the important relationships and connections between Manheim Park and the Green Impact Zone, as well as the overall Green Impact Zone’s context within Kansas City.
Scope of the Green Impact Zone Concept.
Manheim Park Neighborhood Concept The Manheim Park Neighborhood Concept illustrates the general land use strategies, important corridor improvements, creation of parks and open space, and key development opportunities within the Manheim Park neighborhood in order to guide future decisions related to new development and infrastructure. The Neighborhood Concept provides guidance on location, mix, and intensity of uses in a way that helps to prioritize and align important development decisions while remaining flexible and adaptive with regard to individual projects. Scope of the Manheim Park Neighborhood Concept
Scope of the Bancroft Activity Center Concept
Bancroft Activity Center Concept The Bancroft Activity Center Concept focuses on the Bancroft School redevelopment, the 43rd Street / Troost Avenue Intersection, and the immediately adjacent blocks. This focused development concept applies the design principles of the Green Impact Zone and Neighborhood Concepts while incorporating existing building and site conditions, ownership information, known development opportunities, and existing City projects to develop tailored strategies for development and infrastructure. The Bancroft Activity Center concept is an important tool for on-the-ground implementation of the Neighborhood Concept Plan in one particular location, but it also provides a blue-print for future priority development areas throughout the Green Impact Zone.
green impact zone concept The zone wide area plan highlights the major anchors and connections in the Green Impact Zone and throughout the surrounding areas. Major Anchors Major anchors are large institutions with a strong presence in their neighborhoods. These institutions have a long term interest and stabilizing influence on the surrounding community and are important partners in the health and vitality of the community.
Mixed Use Corridors Mixed Use corridors support a variety of shops, offices, and residences along key transit routes with pedestrian and bicycle friendly streets. They connect activity centers and contribute to neighborhood vitality while promoting mobility through the city.
Catalysts Catalysts are potential projects that could jumpstart revitalization in the surrounding area. Investment in these areas could accelerate improvements in the Green Impact Zone. These are priority sites because the benefits extend beyond the borders and scope of the individual project.
Neighborhood Connectors Neighborhood Connectors are streets that span several neighborhoods and can facilitate movement through this part of the city for pedestrians, cyclists, transit, and cars. Neighborhood connectors provide opportunities for an active lifestyle and add beauty to the neighborhoods with integrated landscaping and green stormwater management.
Activity Centers Activity centers are areas with a mix of uses, higher intensity development, and supportive infrastructure such as transit and pedestrian and bicycle facilities. These areas are vibrant centers of neighborhood life with services, entertainment, and community events.
Trails and Open Space Trails and Open Space in the Green Impact Zone provide recreational opportunities, create a network for mobility, and serve environmental functions such as stormwater management and provision of habitat.
DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS | 13
HYDE PARK
C
39th St
SEVEN OAKS PARK
B
OAK PARK THEATER
D
E
G
KANSAS CITY ART INSTITUTE
KING WEEK SCHOOL
F
43rd St
IVANHOE PARK
H
NELSON ATKINS MUESEUM
Brush Creek Blvd
SOUTHMORELAND PARK
Oak Park Southeast
CLEVELAND PARK
VINEYARD PARK
OAK PARK
I
PLAZA
Vineyard Northwest
Cleveland Ave
GILLHAM PARK
Oak Park Southwest
Prospect Ave
WESTPORT
KEMPER MUSEUM
Ivanhoe Southeast
Manheim Park The Paseo
South Hyde Park
Troost Ave
A
Emmanuel Cleaver II Blvd FRANK A. THEIS PARK
THOMAS J. KIELY PARK
KAUFFMAN LEGACY PARK
Swope Pkwy PASEO ACADEMY
MIDWEST RESEARCH MISSOURI INSTITUTE REPERTORY THEATER
Western 49-63
Eastern 49-63
ROCKHURST UNIVERSITY
0 490 Impact 980 1,960 Concept 2,940 Green Zone
BLue Hills
3,920 Feet
Major Activity Center
¯
TOWN FORK GREENWAY PARK SATCHEL PAIGE MEMORIAL STADIUM
L
Catalysts A
Anchor Institution
Parks and Open Space Minor Activity Center
B C E F G
Neighborhood Connector
Green Impact Zone Boundary
H I J
Existing Trail Potential Trail
Mount Cleveland
BLUE HILLS PARK
D
Mixed Use Corridor
BRUCE R. WATKINS CULTURAL CENTER BRUSH CREEK COMMUNITY CENTER
K
J
51st St
UMKC
N
BRUSH CREEK PARKWAY
Neighborhood Boundary
K L
NSP3 Neighborhood Housing Services NSP3 Swope Community Partners Horace Mann School/Model Block Project Bancroft School Redevelopment Bancroft Neighborhood Development Federal Home Loan Bank – Major Rehab Town Fork Creek SE Ivanhoe Neighborhood Development Phase I Sections I and III SE Ivanhoe Neighborhood Development Phase I Bright Light Wabash Village Homes Federal Home Loan Bank – Homeowner Rehab Town Fork Creek Blue Hills Contractor Incubator Project
manheim Park neighborhood concept Catalysts - Bancroft School There are several catalyst opportunities in the Manheim Park neighborhood, and the Bancroft School renovation project is the first priority. The Bancroft School will be renovated to include apartments, new construction, and community amenities. This project transforms an eyesore in the neighborhood to an amenity that will attract people and create momentum to improve the surrounding community. Activity Centers - Troost Ave at 39th St, 43rd St, and Cleaver II Blvd Manheim Park can support three activity centers at the intersections of Troost Avenue and 39th Street, 43rd Street, and Cleaver II Boulevard. These areas will have higher density, a greater mix of uses, and higher intensity development than the rest of the neighborhood. Development and infrastructure investments should be prioritized at activity centers and catalysts sites, and infill development in the neighborhood will radiate from these activity centers. Mixed Use Corridors - Troost Ave Troost Avenue can become a vibrant mixed use corridor that connects activity centers. Additionally, the topography of the area makes Troost an ideal street for green stormwater management. This street can support a vibrant mix of shops, offices, apartments, and houses and include infrastructure that both provides a pleasant pedestrian and bicycle environment while capturing stormwater to create landscaped amenities. Neighborhood Connectors - 43rd St, Paseo, Brush Creek BLVD Manheim Park has several streets that connect through the neighborhood and to the surrounding area. 43rd Street in particular connects Manheim Park to several neighborhoods, parks, and schools to the east and west. Neighborhood connectors should be enhanced with landscaping and pedestrian/bicycle infrastructure to support active lifestyles.
Trails and Open Space - Brush Creek, Gillham Park The Neighborhood Concept highlights an opportunity to create a central green space within Manheim Park in conjunction with the Bancroft catalyst project. The Park would include the area around the Bancroft School and land in the block to the north of the school. Trails could connect the neighborhood to the surrounding area and provide additional recreational opportunities.
DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS | 15
Troost Ave
39th ST
Paseo Blvd
43rd St
Brush Creek BLVD MANHEIM PARK NEIGHBORHOOD CONCEPT
47th St / Emanuel Cleaver II Blvd
N
MIXED USE CORRIDOR
NEIGHBORHOOD CONNECTOR
GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE
COMMUNITY OPEN SPACE
MIXED USE
MORE DENSE RESIDENTIAL
LESS DENSE RESIDENTIAL
MAX BUS STOPS
TRAILS
bancroft activity center Concept Bancroft School The Bancroft School renovation project will transform this vacant building into apartments and community space in the middle of Manheim Park. This project includes construction of new housing units along Forest Avenue and 43rd Street. This project is a catalyst for the neighborhood that will transform a blighted building into an asset that builds momentum for revitalization and infill efforts. Additionally, the site’s proximity to Troost Avenue supports development on this mixed use corridor.
43rd Street 43rd Street is an important east west connector for the neighborhoods in the Green Impact Zone. Providing bike facilities, sidewalk improvements, and green infrastructure along this street can enhance its function as a connector. Encouraging infill development to front on 43rd Street can also activate this connector and provide “eyes on the street.�
Troost & 43rd Street The Bancroft School project supports a neighborhood activity center at Troost Avenue and 43rd Street that includes a walkable street grid, several historic buildings, and a transit hub with several MAX and KCATA lines. Development should build on these strengths to transform this area into an amenity rich, walkable center. The concept calls for mixed use renovation and infill development on Troost, and multifamily development on the west side of Forest Avenue and along 43rd Street. Focusing development in this area will create a critical mass of redevelopment that can anchor other infill development throughout the neighborhood.
Housing Opportunities The Bancroft Activity Center provides opportunities for creative, integrated housing with a mix of densities and styles. There is room for multifamily housing or single family attached housing along major corridors such as Troost and 43rd. This higher density housing could front onto the park, providing residents with green space and the neighborhood with a committed constituency for the park. Single family housing could include accessory structures on site, such as granny flats above alley facing garages. The topography of the neighborhood provides additional opportunities, such as basement garages built into the hills.
Troost Avenue Troost Avenue is an important corridor for Manheim Park and for Kansas City. Streetscape investments are transforming this corridor to the north of Manheim Park. Bringing investment in streetscape elements, bike lanes, green infrastructure and sidewalks to this part of Troost will boost redevelopment efforts in Manheim Park. Development along Troost can support this vision by fronting onto Troost, limiting curb cuts, locating parking in the rear, and exploring shared parking and alley access opportunities. Creative parking strategies on Troost can also reduce the need for off-street parking.
Key Opportunities for Development and Amenities The Bancroft Activity Center provides many unique opportunities for development and amenities. For example some vacant lots can be repurposed to provide mid-block connections between mixed use development and parks. This idea could expand to a continuous green space network of connections throughout the neighborhood. Vacant lots could be consolidated along the Troost corridor to support infill development more in line with current market demands.
DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS | 17
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BANCROFT ACTIVITY CENTER CONCEPT 1. Pedestrian oriented, mixed use streetscape 2. Transit stop 3. Building frontage with parking behind 4. Continuous green space connections 5. Building frontage oriented to the park
6. Community open space 7. Bancroft School Redevelopment 8. Building frontage along 43rd 9. Buffer and/or screening of surface parking
incremental Development The maps below illustrate one scenario for how incremental development can occur over time in a manner the supports the long term development strategy for the Manheim Park neighborhood. The “Long Term” map corresponds to the aerial rending on page 17. The colors on the maps describe different types of mixed use and residential development, and correspond to the “Flexible Housing Options” diagram on page 21.
Existing
This map of existing conditions highlights land and buildings with a high potential for redevelopment, including vacant buildings, vacant lots, properties owned by community development organizations, and other properties available for redevelopment.
short term
The Bancroft School redevelopment and associated amenities provide an important catalyst for new investment. In the short term, adaptive reuse of existing buildings and new development in the immediate proximity of Bancroft and Troost may be most likely, especially where community development organizations have already positioned parcels to redevelop.
43rd St
43rd St
44th St
44th St
N
N
community open space
community open space
vacant lots or buildings
mixed use redevelopment in existing buildings
parcels owned by community housing organizations,
higher density residential development
land trusts, banks, or trustees
lower density residential development vacant lots or buildings
Tracy Ave
Forest Ave
Troost Ave
Tracy Ave
42nd St
Forest Ave
Troost Ave
42nd St
DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS | 19
mid term
New amenities, new services, and committed investment builds momentum for additional development in Bancroft Activity Center. As quality of life improves and housing options expand, new residential and mixed use development begins to transform the inactive to active.
long term
In the long term the Bancroft Activity Center becomes an amenity rich place to live, work and play. A vital mixed use corridor on Troost Ave serves a diverse and healthy neighborhood center complemented by a network of community open space.
43rd St
43rd St
44th St N
44th St N
community open space
community open space
mixed use redevelopment in existing buildings
mixed use redevelopment in existing buildings
mixed use development
mixed use development
higher density residential development
higher density residential development
lower density residential development
lower density residential development
vacant lots or buildings
Tracy Ave
Forest Ave
Troost Ave
Tracy Ave
42nd St
Forest Ave
Troost Ave
42nd St
Flexible Housing Mix The Bancroft Activity Center Concept represents one scenario for how development, infrastructure, and urban design strategies can be successfully integrated in a way that supports the neighborhood’s vision and the principles of the Green Impact Zone. While the key principles of this concept are important to maintain, there is flexibility in terms of specific sites and development opportunities. The diagram to the shows how a variety of housing options can be successfully integrated at various densities, while still supporting a big-picture strategy to focus development and activity in key areas. In addition to strategies to allow flexibility in development while maintaining the integrity of a coordinated development concept, this section also highlights several specific design considerations for new housing development in the Manheim Park neighborhood.
Thoughtfully Mixing Housing Styles and Densities Manheim Park has a mix of housing styles and densities. New development should continue this pattern of diverse housing styles and should avoid homogeneity. Equally important, new developments should be appropriately scaled to their surroundings, and development should transition from highest density on mixed use corridor streets to lowest density on local, residential streets.
Strengthening Neighborhood Character Housing in Manheim Park should complement the character of the existing neighborhood. Houses, townhomes, and multifamily buildings should front onto the street. Housing design should deemphasize garages. The form, massing, and materials used in new housing should be mindful of the historic character. In general, new housing should be high quality and present an attractive face to the public realm.
Accessory Buildings Granny flats, or apartments above garages, can increase the density in the neighborhood while maintaining a single family character. Density benefits the neighborhood by providing more activity on the street and increased demand for shops and services in the activity centers.
Creative Access and Parking Shared driveways and alleys are potential options to accommodate parking within the neighborhood.
Taking Advantage of Unique Topography The steep hills in Manheim Park provide opportunities for unique building types. For example, garages built into the hill, beneath houses could provide off-street parking while preserving the connection between housing, the public realm, and neighborhood character.
High Quality, High Performance Buildings innovative / creative Buildings in Manheim Park should be designed as high quality, efficient structures. Innovative and creative development that strengthens the neighborhood is encouraged.
SHARED DRIVE WAY
GARAGE BENEATH HOUSE
HOUSE WITH GRANNY FLAT
HOUSE WITH GRANNY FLAT
DETACHED ROW HOUSES
ATTACHED ROW HOUSES
DETACHED ROW HOUSES
ATTACHED ROW HOUSES
RETAIL + APARTMENTS
MIXED USE
higher density RESIDENTIAL
lower density RESIDENTIAL
DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS | 21
Flexible Housing Options at Various Densities
Key Design Strategies The Bancroft Activity Center Concept illustrates how a number of distinct design strategies can be integrated together in a coordinated development concept. The diagrams in this section more fully illustrate and clarify how some of these design strategies can be applied more generally throughout the Manheim Park Neighborhood and Green Impact Zone. Some of these strategies address specific urban design choices, while others focus on coordination and focus of investment in a deliberate way to achieve a transformative impact.
Density at intersection nodes Increased activity and density at key intersections throughout the Manheim Park Neighborhood and the broader Green Impact Zone provide an opportunity to integrate convenient, neighborhood scale retail and services, and to take advantage of improved access along important neighborhood connectors.
Link Activity Centers and Amenities Open space, amenities, and activity centers can be linked through continuous streetscape improvements that provide safe, attractive, walkable, and bikeable connections throughout the neighborhood.
Continuous open space connections Throughout the Manheim Park Neighborhood and Green Impact Zone there are opportunities to consolidate vacant lots in a coordinated way to make continuous open space connections and position the neighborhood for new development opportunities.
DEVELOPMENT CONCEPTS | 23
Coordinate Infrastructure and Development A focused, layered approach to public and private development in the neighborhood helps to leverage scarce resources and maximize the impact of investments. The diagrams below show how a coordinated approach takes advantage of existing activity and development interest and helps to support neighborhood revitalization more comprehensively. Catalyst projects supported by strategically located public infrastructure improvements, amenities, and other services help to lay the foundation for renewed private investment and development in the neighborhood.
1. A catalyst project can anchor redevelopment of an area.
3. Parks, services, and other amenities can improve quality of life and attract new residents.
2. Coordinated investments in public infrastructure support private development.
4. With a concentration of layered improvements and amenities, new private infill is primed to succeed.
Complete Streets Major mixed use streets like Troost Avenue and important neighborhood connectors like 43rd Street can function as “complete streets� that simultaneously provide residents mobility options, create safe and attractive public spaces, serve critical infrastructure functions in a sustainable way, and provide amenities that enhance quality of life.
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1. Drive & Transit lanes Complete streets make room for all modes of transportation including driving, walking, and biking. 2. Bike lanes
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4. Amenity zone A complete street is about more than transportation. The amenity zone enhances the appearance and experience of the street for a variety of users. Bike racks, benches, trash cans,
Dedicated bike lanes invite even the casual cyclist to consider
lights, art, infiltration basins (rainwater management), and
biking as a safe and convenient mode of transportation.
shade trees are all part of the amenity zone.
3. Parking and/or green infrastructure
5. Land use
Parking for both automobiles and bicycles provides easy
The right mix of uses is key for creating active streets.
access and invites people to stay awhile. Integrated curb
Development should enhance complete streets through proper
bump outs calm traffic, provide safe and comfortable
building orientation that defines the public realm and parking
pedestrian crossings, and space for smart rainwater
strategies that do not isolate or discourage pedestrians.
management solutions
chapter 3
Performance Guidelines
PerfoRmance guidelines The purpose of the performance guidelines is to translate the larger goals and vision of the Green Impact Zone and the Manheim Neighborhood into specific expectations for public and private projects. Performance guidelines are non-place-specific, and apply to all development in the area. Each performance guideline category includes a description of how and why the topic is important, and a checklist of specific items that a particular project should address. The performance guidelines are intended to set expectations for infrastructure investment and development in Manheim Park and also to serve as a conversation tool to align development interests, city responsibilities, and neighborhood needs and desires. Performance guidelines are organized into the following topics: Building Sustainably Building sustainably lowers energy and water bills while increasing the comfort and quality of the built environment. Sustainable strategies are a core concept of the Green Impact Zone.
Physical Infrastructure Physical infrastructure includes road, sidewalk, stormwater management, streetlights, and more. Investments in infrastructure can create a safer, more livable neighborhood and support private development. Access to Jobs and Services Planning for a mix of uses and enhanced mobility options will facilitate better access to jobs and services. Safe and Healthy Living Thoughtful improvement of the built environment can improve safety, encourage active living, and promote access to healthy food options. Integrated Services and Amenities Creative coordination of parks, schools , and other facilities serves the neighborhood more efficiently while supporting a more holistic approach to resident needs.
Diverse Housing Options Planning for a range of housing options will strengthen the neighborhood by attracting a diverse mix of new residents while meeting the needs of existing residents.
Capacity Building, Skill training, and Workforce Development Development in Manheim Park will lead to increased employment opportunities in construction and the development of permanent businesses and services. Workforce development and skill training will ensure that Manheim residents are ready to take advantage of these opportunities.
Cultural Heritage and Neighborhood Fabric Development in Manheim Park should recognize the existing neighborhood identity. Community engagement should be an integral part of every infrastructure and development project.
Coordination of Development, Infrastructure, and Services Private development and public investments should coordinate to maximize the impact of both. Departments and organizations should pursue an integrated approach to services and infrastructure.
Open Space and Public Space Well maintained and active public spaces can be an attractor and catalyst for the neighborhood.
Building Sustainably
City Facilities & Infrastructure
Individual Home Builders
Residential Developers
Mixed Use Developers
City Facilities & Infrastructure
Individual Home Builders
Residential Developers
Mixed Use Developers
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Safe and Healthy Living
Energy Efficient Buildings
Diverse Fitness and Recreation Opportunities
Buildings that Conserve Water
Local Access to Healthy Foods
On-Site Water Management
Understanding Neighborhood Health Challenges
Innovative Design and Construction
Physical Improvements to Enhance Safety
Diverse Housing Options
Safe and Attractive Streets
Housing Choices
Property Maintenance
Housing Balance
Walkable Neighborhoods
Quality, Efficient, Affordable Housing
Healthy Buildings
New Housing Models
Integrated Services and Amenities
Neighborhood Character
Complete Communities
Creative Financing, Maintenance, and Management
Supportive Environment
Cultural Heritage and Neighborhood Fabric Community Engagement Responding to Neighborhood Needs Preservation and Restoration Contextual Development Open and Public Space Open Space as a Catalyst Coordination with Other Amenities and Public Facilities Interconnected Open Space System Multi-Functional Open Space Vacant Lot Mitigation Sensitive Site Protection Physical Infrastructure Mobility and Connectivity Streetscape Enhancements Facility Improvements Green Infrastructure Repair and Maintenance Targeted Improvements Access to Jobs and Services Convenient, Accessible Retail and Services Activity Centers Business Variety Mixed Use, Transit-Oriented Development Enhanced Mobility and Connectivity
Shared Spaces and Coordinated Programming Capacity Building, Skill Training, and Workforce Development Workforce Development Youth Education and Empowerment Partnerships Green Jobs Local Businesses Coordination of Development, Infrastructure, and Services Neighborhood Business Support Layer Development and Infrastructure Investments Public Investment as Development Incentive Collaborative Partnerships Alignment of Departments and Services
BUILDING Sustainably • • • •
Energy Efficient Buildings Buildings That Conserve Water On-Site Water Management Innovative Design and Construction
Sustainable building strategies can increase the health, efficiency, durability, and comfort of homes and businesses while reducing construction and maintenance costs. Within the Manheim Park neighborhood and Green Impact Zone more broadly, new and innovative techniques for building design and construction can put higher quality living and working environments within the reach of more people, and further support local education and workforce development efforts. Sustainable building practices include designing and locating projects to adapt, integrate, and restore the natural environment, as well as energy-efficiency and renewable energy strategies, water conservation, and use of recycled materials.
Building Sustainably Guidelines
□□ Energy Efficient Buildings:
Integrating energy-efficiency strategies for new construction and rehabilitation helps to reduce energy-use lower utility bills, and improve air quality. Buildings should be oriented on the site to take advantage of the sun’s energy, and well insulated and ventilated. Reflective materials and vegetation can reduce heat gain, while use of efficient appliances can lower energy consumption.
□□ Buildings that conserve water:
Reduce daily water use through high-efficiency plumbing fixtures. Identify opportunities for to harvest and re-use rainwater. These strategies reduce the burden on the city’s water system, while saving residents money on water bills.
□□ On-site water management:
Use Manheim Park and the Green Impact Zone as a model for coordinated stormwater management strategies by incorporating rain gardens and other practices that store and filter runoff on-site.
□□ Innovative Design and Construction:
Use innovative techniques for design and construction that can improve the health, durability, efficiency, and sustainability of a building. Demonstrate new ways of building that integrate and restore the natural environment while providing higher quality living environments that are more affordable and accessible to users.
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Sustainable Home Building Strategies
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
6.
Orientation: Orient the building on the site to take advantage of the sun’s energy. Rainwater: Harvest rainwater for irrigation, car washing, toilet flushing, and other uses. Framing: Incorporate resource-efficient framing techniques to minimize wasted materials. Insulation: Insulate the building and provide appropriate ventilation. Windows: Install windows with a low U-value. The U-Value rating of windows makes a difference on the overall insulation quality of the home. Doors: High pressure rated doors with steel reinforcement help fight wind damage
7.
Roof: Use reflective roof materials or a vegetated roof. 8. HVAC: Use energy efficient heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems. 9. Plumbing: Incorporate high-efficiency plumbing fixtures (i.e., low-flow, dual flush) to reduce daily water use. 10. Appliances: Use EnergyStar rated lighting and appliances to reduce daily energy loads. 11. Materials: Use materials with low or no VOCs (volatile organic compounds); look for salvaged and recycled-content materials where possible) 12. Renewable Energy: Renewable energy reduces utility bills, increases self-sufficiency, and improves the health of the building.
Diverse Housing Options • Housing Choices • Housing Balance • Quality, Efficient, Affordable Housing • New Housing Models • Neighborhood Character • Creative Financing, Maintenance, and Management Successful housing development in the Manheim Park Neighborhood must provide the right amount of housing in the right location, and carefully integrate new housing to strengthen neighborhoods and reinforce a sense of community. New housing should address the needs of existing residents, but also potential new residents who can contribute to the vitality of the neighborhood. Mixed income developments can provide affordable housing options for those in need, while incorporating new market-rate housing that helps to create neighborhoods that are viable and self-sustaining in the long-term.
New single-family housing, infill housing built on vacant lots scattered throughout the neighborhood, attached and multi-family housing, and mixed-use development providing retail and services in addition to housing options, are all part of the diverse housing mix that can serve existing and future residents of the Manheim Park neighborhood. Housing development in Manheim Park should illustrate new approaches to housing residents in a manner that addresses both pre-existing challenges and emerging needs, and demonstrate techniques and practices that can be applied across the Green Impact Zone and even citywide. This includes innovative approaches to home construction, maintenance, and property management that improve the affordability, performance, appearance, and longevity of housing. New housing should also reinforce the tight-knit community fabric of the neighborhood by supporting homeowners that are engaged and invested in the neighborhood.
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Diverse Housing Options Guidelines
□□ Housing Choices:
Integrate a mix of residential densities, styles, and price ranges within the neighborhood to serve a range of ages, incomes, lifestyles, and housing preferences.
□□ Housing Balance:
Create neighborhoods that are viable and selfsustaining in the long term through a balance of housing that enables ownership and advancement opportunities for existing residents, affordable housing options to serve those in need, and a variety of market-rate housing opportunities to attract new residents.
□□ Quality, Efficient, Affordable Housing:
Support high quality home design and construction methods that are durable, safe, healthy, and environmentally sustainable while remaining economically viable to develop and affordable to rent, own, and maintain.
□□ New Housing Models:
Explore, and adapt creative new ways to house residents to address both pre-existing challenges and emerging needs, with potential application across the Green Impact Zone, or even citywide.
□□ Neighborhood Character:
Carefully integrate new housing to strengthen neighborhoods and reinforce the tight-knit community fabric. This includes being responsive to existing neighborhood patterns while finding creative new ways new ways to engage residents, address neighborhood needs, support social interaction, and build capacity.
□□ Creative Financing, Maintenance, and Management:
Identify creative strategies to finance quality housing for developers, owners and renters, and expand homeownership opportunities. Explore innovative approaches to home maintenance and property management to improve the visual appearance and longevity of housing.
Cultural Heritage and Neighborhood Fabric • Community Engagement • Responding to Neighborhood Needs • Preservation and Restoration • Contextual Development
Cultural Heritage and Neighborhood Fabric GUIDELINES
□□ Community Engagement:
Engage the community in a meaningful way and incorporate community input into the design and programming of the project, as well as ongoing operation and management. Infrastructure and development projects should clearly align with the vision and goals of the neighborhood and the Green Impact Zone.
The passion, commitment, and vision of the people of Manheim Park are at the heart of a transformative future for the neighborhood. Community pride, a tight-knit neighborhood, and renewed engagement of residents are important assets in Manheim Park. By capitalizing on and sustaining this strong public engagement, new development can build capacity and community vitality while at the same time positioning development for more success and greater impact.
□□ Responding to Neighborhood
The Manheim Park neighborhood has a lot of history, and its architecture, layout, landscape, and other features are an essential part of what makes the neighborhood a unique and desirable place. New development and infrastructure investment should be sensitive to this important heritage and strive to integrate into the neighborhood in a supportive way that strengthens neighborhood vitality.
□□ Preservation and Restoration:
Needs:
Ensure that new investment reflects and responds to the needs and aspirations of the people who live, work, and play in the neighborhood. Infrastructure and development projects should clearly align with the vision and goals of the neighborhood and the Green Impact Zone.
Preserve and adaptively reuse historic and culturally significant buildings and neighborhood landmarks.
□□ Contextual Development:
Tailor construction and neighborhood design to be compatible with local characteristics and to complement the existing neighborhood fabric, including scale, massing, and use of materials. Identify opportunities to strengthen the social and cultural fabric of the community through new development and redevelopment.
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Contextual Development: New development should recognize and respond to the form and character of the existing neighborhood.
Community Engagement: Development and infrastructure investments should be driven by a community process.
Open Space & Public Space • Open Space as Catalyst • Coordination with Other Amenities and Public Facilities • Interconnected Open Space System • Multi-Functional Open Space • Vacant Lot Mitigation • Sensitive Site Protection Well maintained open space that is actively programmed is a community asset and can be a catalyst for new residential development and mixed use development on Troost. Manheim Park has the potential to support a community park and a network of trails and greenways that provide new connections throughout the neighborhood. Coordinating parks and open space with private development, public facilities, and neighborhood organizations will ensure that these spaces remain vibrant, well maintained, and active. These guidelines are designed to ensure Manheim Park has adequate, quality park space while mitigating problems associated with vacant lots and unmaintained open space. Physical Infrastructure GUIDELINES
□□ Open Space as a Catalyst:
Parks can be an attraction for the neighborhood; especially if the park has a committed resident and business constituency and is connected to an activity center with a mix of uses. As an attractive space and visible public investment, a park can serve as a focal point and amenity for surrounding residential areas and a tool to revitalize key activity centers and corridors.
□□ Coordination with Other Amenities and Public Facilities:
Coordinate development of amenities, such as shops and restaurants, and public facilities, such as schools, with neighborhood parks. Coordinated parks and facilities provide opportunities for exercise, recreation, training, and outdoor activities that serve the mission of adjacent institutions and facilities.
□□ Interconnected Open Space System:
Strategically plan parks, open space, trails, and development to create green connections throughout the neighborhood. Look for opportunities to use vacant lots to connect parks to activity centers. Seek creative uses for surface parking including hosting a farmers’ market on the weekend.
□□ Multi-Functional Open Space:
Design open space to function as recreation space, stormwater management, natural habitat, and other uses. Consider how these uses complement each other and can function in the same space. Parks can simultaneously provide transportation, recreation, and environmental benefits, while enhancing the stability and vitality of surrounding areas.
□□ Vacant Lot Mitigation:
Mitigate vacant lots with infill development, selling to abutting owners, using lots as community spaces such as gardens or playgrounds, or utilizing the land for stormwater management.
□□ Sensitive Site Protection:
Locate development away from wetlands or streams, steep slopes, land with prime soils, and critical wildlife habitat areas.
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1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Vacant Lot Mitigation Strategies: I variety of strategies an mitigate vacant lots (1). The land can be sold to abutting land owners (2), transformed into a community park (3), used for infill development (4), stormwater management (5), or a community garden (6).
Farmers’ Market: Parking lots can double as public spaces by hosting farmers’ markets or community events.
Community Gardens: Trails and walkways ensure residents have access to parks and public space. Connecting commercial corridors to parks with walkable connections increases their use.
Physical Infrastructure • • • • • •
Mobility and Connectivity Streetscape Enhancements Facility Improvements Green Infrastructure Repair and Maintenance Targeted Improvements
Physical infrastructure improvements are the most visible public investments in the community. Making smart decisions about infrastructure can result in a safer, healthier, more sustainable neighborhood and catalyze additional private development. These improvements range from streetscape improvements, to utility and stormwater upgrades, to parks, schools and community facilities. Infrastructure investments demonstrate public commitment to the area, help to improve the image and perception of a place, and can spur private development, particularly when they are strategically coordinated with other development activity. Within the Green Impact Zone, there is a unique opportunity to explore green infrastructure that simultaneously addresses critical service needs, enhances the health of the safety of the community, and functions as an amenity for surrounding areas. Physical Infrastructure GUIDELINES
□□ Mobility and Connectivity:
Improve connectivity within Manheim Park and to other areas throughout the Green Impact Zone and the City. Build complete Streets that support pedestrians, cyclists, transit, and automobiles. Emphasize 43rd Street as a green street and neighborhood connector. Design key intersections on Troost Avenue as neighborhood gateways oriented around safe, attractive transit access.
□□ Streetscape Enhancements:
Provide and improve streetscape features including sidewalks, benches, landscaping, and other pedestrian amenities. Enhance safety through lighting, signage, crosswalks, increased activity, and thoughtful street design.
□□ Facility Improvements:
Identify opportunities to provide parks, schools, and other community facilities to serve neighborhood residents. Strategically locate facilities to coordinate and complement adjacent infrastructure and development, and to function as anchors that strengthen surrounding areas.
□□ Green Infrastructure:
Incorporate green infrastructure as a strategy to address service challenges in a holistic and sustainable way. Green infrastructure can encompass a range of applications, including green stormwater management, renewable energy opportunities, energy-efficient street lighting, habitat restoration, integration with the existing smart grid power system, and more.
□□ Repair and Maintenance:
Repair and maintain existing facilities and infrastructure. Use durable materials in new construction and plan for maintenance during the design and construction phases of the project.
□□ Targeted Improvements:
Locate development on a site with existing infrastructure wherever possible. Prioritize development and infrastructure in areas where investments can be leveraged for maximum benefit. Coordinate with private development and layer infrastructure investments for greater impact.
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Green Stormwater Management: Incorporating “best management practices” like rain gardens helps to improve water quality, reduce flooding, and lessen the burden on the City’s aging sewers, while functioning as an attractive neighborhood amenity.
Energy-Efficient Streetlights: Full cut-off LED streetlights save energy
Complete Streets: Complete streets accommodate pedestrians, cyclists, automobiles, and transit.
Access to Jobs and Services • Convenient, Accessible Retail and Services • Activity Centers • Business Variety • Mixed-Use, Transit-Oriented Development • Enhanced Mobility and Connectivity Residents have identified the need for enhanced neighborhood-oriented businesses, including greater access to basic retail and services to meet everyday needs. Residents also seek a greater quality and variety of businesses that are convenient, walkable, and accessible within the neighborhood. New development, particularly along Troost Avenue, can help to create well-designed mixed use corridors that serve as attractive gateways to the community and support the city’s retail and service needs. From a wider perspective, revitalized corridors can seamlessly integrate with surrounding neighborhoods, efficiently provide vital connections across the city, and promote increased prosperity by fully serving local and community needs. It is also critical to recognize the importance of coordinating development with transit - a key element of urban infrastructure within the neighborhood providing mobility options and connecting neighborhood residents to vital employment and services.
Access to jobs and services GUIDELINES
□□ Convenient, Accessible Retail and Services:
Integrate convenient local retail and services to serve neighborhood needs and create employment opportunities for residents.
□□ Activity Centers:
Cluster development around activity centers to expand access to transit, jobs, and services, maximize impact of infrastructure investments, and provide a critical mass of activity to support desired retail, services, and amenities.
□□ Business Variety:
Position new development and redevelopment to support a greater quality, quantity, and variety of businesses.
□□ Mixed Use, Transit-Oriented Development:
Pursue well-designed, mixed-use, transit-oriented development along the Troost Avenue corridor that serves as an attractive gateway to the neighborhood and supports the area’s retail and service needs.
□□ Enhanced Mobility and Connectivity:
Establish key physical connections within and between neighborhoods to improve access to retail, employment, and services, and to increase mobility options including walking and biking.
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Access to jobs and services: Transit, mixed use development, and close proximity between housing and retail/office spaces increases access to jobs and services.
Safe and Healthy Living • Diverse Fitness and Recreation Opportunities • Local Access to Healthy Foods • Understanding Neighborhood Health Challenges • Physical Improvements to Deter Crime and Enhance Safety • Safe and Attractive Streets • Property Maintenance • Walkable Neighborhoods • Healthy Buildings Health and safety are critical issues in the Manheim Park neighborhood. Safety in Manheim Park has been dramatically improving in the past few years due to increased police presence, better police/community relationships, and responsible residents reporting crime. Many of the performance guidelines in other sections this document, including those encouraging new infill housing, developing vibrant activity centers, creating streetscapes that encourage pedestrian activity, and reusing vacant lots, all improve perceptions of the neighborhood, increase “eyes on the street,” and thereby enhance public safety. While neighborhood safety ultimately relies on establishing active, healthy, vibrant neighborhoods, physical improvements can deter crime and enhance the safety and perception of the neighborhood. Promoting healthy living requires creating neighborhoods that accommodate healthy lifestyles. Healthy neighborhoods are about more than recreation. New development can enhance resident health through quality design and construction, and the use of healthy building materials. Local access to healthy food options not only improves resident health, but also provides
Public safety: Coordination with police and involvement of police in the neighborhood is positively impacting crime levels in Manheim Park
Healthy lifestyles: Bicycle and pedestrian infrastructure and access to parks and trails will encourage healthy lifestyles in Manheim Park.
opportunities for social interaction, youth development, and entrepreneurship. Healthy neighborhoods are also characterized by diverse fitness and recreation opportunities, safe and attractive streets that encourage walking and biking, and locally accessible retail and services.
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Safety and health living GUIDELINES
□□ Diverse Fitness and Recreation Opportunities:
Support healthy neighborhoods through multiuse parks and trails that provide recreation opportunities while also enhancing mobility and connectivity. Increase access to wellness care through multifunctional wellness spaces and convenient access to essential health services.
□□ Local Access to Healthy Foods: Improve local access to healthy food with development strategies that accommodate community agriculture, neighborhood markets, and healthy food programs. Connect residents to healthy foods by locating development with convenient access to transit and grocery options. Pursue partnerships with other neighborhoods and organizations to leverage broader urban agriculture efforts.
□□ Understanding Neighborhood
□□ Safe and Attractive Streets:
Enhance safety and improve neighborhood perceptions through sidewalk repairs, improved lighting, crosswalks and incorporation of other street improvements and amenities.
□□ Property Maintenance:
Pursue aggressive property maintenance strategies to improve safety, strengthen property values, and create a more attractive and desirable location for residents and businesses.
□□ Walkable Neighborhoods:
Encourage active, healthy lifestyles with infrastructure that supports walking and biking, and compact development that provides convenient access to employment, services, and amenities.
□□ Healthy Buildings:
Enhance resident health through quality design and construction, and the use of healthy building materials, including non-toxic and mold-resistant materials.
Health Challenges:
Use neighborhood-level health information, including existing health challenges, potential partnerships, and other opportunities in order to tailor development and service strategies to the specific needs of the local community.
□□ Physical Improvements to Deter Crime and Enhance Safety:
Incorporate strategies for using lighting, landscaping, signage, and paving treatments to encourage legitimate use of space and while deterring crime. Locate, design, and orient new development to promote activity in public spaces and natural surveillance (“eyes on the street”).
Access to Healthy Foods: Plan for land uses and flexible spaces that encourage grocery stores, farmers’ markets, and community gardens.
Integrated Services and Amenities • Complete Communities • Supportive Environment • Shared Spaces and Coordinated Programming By thoughtfully integrating a variety of services and amenities, new development can help support complete communities that strengthen community relationships, build resident capacity, and sustain momentum and success over time. Integrated services and amenities help to provide a supportive environment for all ages through opportunities for personal growth, social interaction, education, skill development, and other critical needs. In a time when needs are great and resources scarce, coordinating and potentially collocating services and amenities allows the community to leverage its investments more efficiently and effectively, and opens the door to new collaborative partnerships.
Integrated Services and Amenities GUIDELINES
□□ Complete Communities:
Incorporate a range of services and amenities in an intentional and supportive way (community gardens, parks, recreational opportunities, community facilities, health and wellness services, educational services, cultural and social venues).
□□ Supportive Environment:
Provide a nurturing, well-connected, supportive environment where youth, elderly, and families can participate in healthy, safe activities.
□□ Shared Spaces and Coordinated Programming:
Explore the sharing of physical space and coordination of facilities and services to leverage investments and provide services in the most efficient and effective manner possible.
Community Facilities: Community facilities and programming can support and engage the youth of the neighborhood.
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Integrated Community Services and Amenities: Public space in Manheim park can serve many functions simultaneously. For example parks can serve a recreational function while also host a theater, community garden, and farmers’ markets.
Capacity Building, SKill Training, and Workforce Development • Workforce Development • Youth Education and Empowerment • Partnerships • Green Jobs • Local Businesses Building community capacity requires developing the programs, partnerships, and systems that enable the community to continue making progress toward its vision even after the planning process is complete. Through capacity building efforts to promote education, new skills, and self-sufficiency, development can help to support and maintain neighborhoods over time. Residents have emphasized the need for employment and job training opportunities in general, as well as support for neighborhood businesses that can employ local residents and are conveniently accessible to surrounding residents. Employment for residents can be supported by continuing to improve the connection between employers and potential employees through workforce training efforts. Opportunities include direct employment with the development and construction process as well as the long-term business opportunities that new development creates.
Capacity Building, Skill Training, and Workforce Development GUIDELINES
□□ Workforce Development:
Increase knowledge, skills, and job opportunities through education and workforce development efforts related to various components of the construction, management, and maintenance of new development.
□□ Youth Education and Empowerment:
Create opportunities to educate and empower youth through skill development, internships, and other opportunities, both through the development process and through uses and services integrated into the development program.
□□ Partnerships:
Identify opportunities to leverage new and existing partnerships to connect and coordinate potential employees, workforce development resources, and potential employers (developers and new businesses).
□□ Green Jobs:
Leverage the ambitious goals of the Green Impact Zone to expand economic opportunity in the neighborhood through renewable energy, energy efficiency, urban agriculture, and other green jobs opportunities.
□□ Local Businesses:
Entrepreneurship: Attracting new development and activity to corridors like Troost Avenue will provide opportunities for employment and local entrepreneurs
Create projects that accommodate and support existing and startup neighborhood businesses that can employ local residents and are conveniently accessible to surrounding residents.
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Employment Opportunities: New development can provide employment opportunities in the form of construction, design, and project management, and property management positions. Over time, new investment and development and the neighborhood will support more permanent and sustainable opportunities. Development that brings new residents to the neighborhood increases the demand for goods and services, and provides opportunities for local entrepreneurs to meet those needs. Workforce training programs can ensure neighborhood residents are ready for these opportunities. Local employment commitments from businesses working in the Green Impact Zone will also play a role.
Coordination of Development, Infrastructure, and Services • Layer Development and Infrastructure Investments • Neighborhood Business Support • Public Investment as Development Incentive • Collaborative Partnerships Between Organizations • Alignment of Departments and Services
Within the Manheim Park Neighborhood and Green Impact Zone more broadly, there is a unique opportunity for new development to demonstrate how a coordinated approach with public, private, non-profit, and neighborhood stakeholders can have a significant impact on the vitality and long-term sustainability of an area. Demonstrating public commitment through infrastructure, facility improvements, and other public investments is a powerful tool to attract a higher quality, more diverse mix of businesses. Coordinating these investments with new private development helps to focus energy and leverage scarce resources for maximum impact. Collaborative partnerships between organizations and strategic alignment within City departments are both critical components to sustain momentum and address needs in a holistic and transformative way.
Public infrastructure as development incentive: Public infrastructure on Troost north of Manheim Park is an incentive for private development.
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Coordination of development, infrastructure, and services GUIDELINES
□□ Neighborhood Business Support:
Increase employment opportunities and enhance retail and services for local residents through investments and incentives to support neighborhood businesses.
□□ Layer Development and
Business Support: This business incubator in Greensburg, Kansas provides low cost start up space for local businesses.
Infrastructure Investments:
Strategically coordinate development with existing and planned investments in infrastructure, transit, community spaces, and public facilities to leverage scarce resources and maximize the impact of public and private investments.
□□ Public Investment as Development Incentive:
Demonstrate public commitment to the neighborhood through infrastructure, facility improvements, and other public investments to attract a higher quality, more diverse mix of businesses.
□□ Collaborative Partnerships:
Expand successful partnerships between the City, Green Impact Zone, neighborhood groups, service organizations, the faith community, and other stakeholders to coordinate efforts, sustain momentum, and address community needs on a variety of issues.
Alignment of Departments: Development in Manheim Park is an opportunity for the City to demonstrate its improved coordination between city departments.
□□ Alignment of Departments and Services:
Demonstrate a new model of alignment for City departments and other organizations through strategic coordination of improvements, sharing of resources and facilities, and cooperation to address needs and track progress in a holistic manner.
Collaborative Partnerships: Partnerships and collaboration between all stakeholders in Manheim Park will lead to the best outcome.
chapter 4
Process Framework
Development Stakeholders and Relationships Successful development in the Manheim Park neighborhood must support the neighborhood vision and build the capacity of residents while remaining viable and attractive for private investment. Achieving these goals depends on coordination and collaboration between several groups of stakeholders. This section identifies these stakeholders and describes the supportive relationships and interactions that together encourage new quality development.
Developers Developers are interested in building large scale projects, such as mixed use buildings, apartment buildings, rowhouses, or multiple single family houses in the neighborhood.
Green Impact Zone The Green Impact is uniquely positioned to align and mobilize a variety of partners and entities to enhance the capacity and vitality of the neighborhood. The Green Impact Zone is simultaneously a resource for interested developers, a supportive infrastructure for residents and neighborhood groups, and a coordinator between the City, the neighborhood, and many other groups.
Individual Builders This group includes people who are interested in development smaller projects such as an individual single family house or a significant renovation of an existing City house. The City of Kansas City, Missouri plays two distinct roles in the development of the Manheim Park Neighborhood. Neighborhood Association The first is in its review and oversight capacity for new The Neighborhood Association represents neighborhood development through permitting, code enforcement, residents. This group includes the Neighborhood incentives, and other mechanisms. No less important, Association board and supporting committees, such as the City plays a critical role through direct investment in the housing committee and workforce committee. infrastructure, services, and amenities.
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The Green Impact Zone functions as an informational resource for developers and helps guide interested developers and investors toward successful and impactful projects. The Green Impact Zone also actively pursues new investment through marketing of Green Impact Zone potential.
Developers
Major Developers Individual Homebuilders and Renovators
In coordination with the Green Impact Zone and in support of neighborhood goals, the City provides development review, approval, and enforcement, as well as financial and regulatory incentives to encourage projects that achieve Green Impact Zone and neighborhood goals.
The neighborhood provides guidance and a sounding board for developers to identify potential opportunities, and to ensure that projects are supportive of neighborhood goals, integrate with a coherent development vision, and enhance the vitality and quality of life for residents.
Historic Manheim Park Neighborhood Association
The Green Impact Zone provides support to build capacity of residents and neighborhood organizations. The Green Impact Zone also aligns partners to achieve neighborhood goals.
Neighborhood Association Board Committees
Green Impact Zone
The City supports the neighborhood through development review and approval, as well as code enforcement. The City directly invests in the neighborhood through infrastructure and services.
City of Kansas City, MO
The City and Green Impact Zone coordinate to ensure that City action and investment are aligned with Green Impact Zone and neighborhood goals.
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Engagement PRocess
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Discover During the Discover phase process the developer researches the neighborhood and existing plans, contacts the Green Impact Zone, and begins exploring project ideas with the Neighborhood Association. The City should also research existing plans and meet with the Green Impact Zone and Neighborhood Association when considering infrastructure and service investments in the neighborhood.
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For development to be successful and fulfill the vision of the Manheim Park neighborhood, all entities involved in the development process must be engaged throughout the process. The following chart highlights the points in the development process where the development entities engage each other. Engagement in the development process can be broken into three phases: Discover, Design, and Develop.
Design As the project moves forward, the developer should continue to meet with the neighborhood to refine the project design and align the project with neighborhood goals. The developer and the City should coordinate to find opportunities for partnerships. Departments within the City should coordinate as well. At the end of this phase, the neighborhood association should give approval (or suggest changes) for the development or city project.
Develop During the develop phase, the developer will meet with the City to secure the approvals necessary to proceed. The developer should also work in cooperation with the neighborhood’s workforce committee and the Green Impact Zone to pursue local employment opportunities related to the project.
City (Infrastructure / Investment Role)
City (Regulatory Role)
Green Impact Zone
Neighborhood Associations
Individual Builders
Developers
PROCESS FRAMEWORK | 53
DISCOVER
Action: Research the development strategy, performance guidelines, and process framework Action: Contact Green Impact Zone (research, guidance, investment and development opportunities) Meeting: Discuss opportunities and potential development program Align developer interests and neighborhood vision Participants: Neighborhood Association Housing Committee, Green Impact Zone, Developers/Builders/City)
Action: Develop concepts
DESIGN
Action: Identify opportunities to coordinate public and private investment
Action: Identify opportunities to strategically align departments and organizations Meeting: Refine development concepts Secure recommendation from Neighborhood Association OR make changes and repeat Participants: Neighborhood Association Housing Committee, Green Impact Zone, Developers/Builders/City) Meeting: Review project and City development review expectations Participants: Developers / Builders, City
DEVELOP
Action: Identify potential financial or regulatory incentives
Action: Secure City permits and approvals Meeting: Develop local employment strategies Participants: Neighborhood Association Workforce Committee, Green Impact Zone, Developers/Builders/City)
Development PRocess
1. Neighborhood Vision 2. Project Idea and Feasibility 3. Community Engagement and Design
3. Community Engagement and Design
4. Financial Plan and Bidding
4. Financial Plan and Bidding
5. Begin Hiring and Construction
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1. Neighborhood Vision The recent development interest in Manheim Park began with the Manheim Park Healthy Neighborhood Initiatives in 2008-9. This development strategy builds on past efforts to provide all stakeholders greater clarity and direction for how projects can help the neighborhood achieve its vision. Developers interested in working in Manheim Park should start by reviewing existing plans and other materials including the Manheim Park Healthy Neighborhoods Vision Document and this Development Strategy.
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Developers go through a detailed process of planning and design before groundbreaking occurs on any project. It is important to understand the development process in order to know how community input can most effectively enhance a project and when key events, such as hiring of local workers can occur. The diagram below and following descriptions illustrate this process.
6. Ongoing Operations
2. Project Idea and Feasibility The developer should refine the project idea in coordination with the Neighborhood Association and the Green Impact Zone. The developer will study the feasibility of the project from a financial standpoint and identify funding resources. If the project aligns with the vision and goals of the neighborhood and is financial feasible, the developer will move ahead to the next phase, community engagement and design.
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3. Community Engagement and Design During this phase, the developer hires an architect to begin the design process. At the beginning of this phase the developer and architect should take the outline of the project idea to the residents and businesses of Manheim Park to seek their input on the project. The public will have a chance to review the project, give input, and influence the design of the project. The developer will refine the project idea based on the community’s feedback. This process should be ongoing with multiple points where public input is considered, and the community is kept up to date on the project progress.
4. Financial Plan and Bidding The phase involves the detailed financial planning of the construction of the project and the selection of contractors to do the work. In most large projects, the developer receives bids from interested contractors. A large contractor may then select subcontractors to complete the work.
5. Begin Hiring and Construction After the financial plan and contractors are in place, the contractor and subcontractors begin hiring staff, and construction begins on the project. The construction process involves continued design and financial work by the development team and multiple rounds of hiring for different kinds of work.
6. Ongoing Operations The ongoing operation of the building provides additional opportunities for the neighborhood. Residential properties need property managers and workers to maintain the buildings and the site. If the site has retail, office, or other nonresidential use, there are opportunities for local employment with businesses and opportunities for neighborhood entrepreneurs to establish new businesses.