Urban Design Manual
Urban Design Manual
Urban Design Manual
Notice:
Carlos A. Gimenez
Mayor
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
Joe A. Martinez, Chairman
Audrey M. Edmonson, Vice-Chairwoman
Barbara J. Jordan
District 1
Lynda Bell
District 8
Jean Monestime
District 2
Dennis C. Moss
District 9
Audrey M. Edmonson
District 3
Sally A. Heyman
District 4
Bruno A. Barreiro
District 5
Rebeca Sosa
District 6
Xavier L. Suarez
District 7
Harvey Ruvin, Clerk of Courts
Pedro J. Garcia, Property Appraiser
Robert A. Cuevas, Jr., County Attorney
Jack Osterholt, Interim Director,
Sustainability, Planning and
Economic Enhancement
The urban design guidelines and principles in this manual reflect the guidelines for urban form and other policies of MiamiDade Countys Comprehensive Development Master Plan (CDMP) pertaining to community land use and housing patterns
and design. Although the establishment and use of sound principles of urban design are recommended in the CDMP, at this
time many standards in the Countys current Zoning Code (Chapter 33, Code of Miami-Dade County) are inconsistent with
many of these principles and may impede, but do not necessarily prevent, their implementation. Many of these principles can
be accomplished within the current standards of the Code and others may be accomplished using procedures established in
the Code. These guidelines are issued to illustrate ways to accomplish the land use and housing patterns and design objectives
encouraged by policies of the CDMP, and as a supplement to standards of the Zoning Code for the site plan review process
provided for in the Code. Miami-Dade County has been amending the Code to more fully reflect these principles including
the Traditional Neighborhood District, the Community Urban Center, the Planned Area Development District and recently
the Rowhouse District. Applications for zoning actions and site plan approvals should employ the principles recommended in
this manual to the maximum extent practicable. In particular, request for development approvals and site plans associated with
requests for district boundary changes, special exceptions, or other actions requiring public hearings, should at an early opportunity also identify any other variances to the current zoning that may be desirable or necessary to enable utilization of these
recommended design principles, particularly those necessary to implement explicit provisions of the CDMP. Applicants are
also advised to provide complete plans when requesting zoning or permit approvals in an effort to avoid unnecessary delays.
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
A Brief History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Chronology of Neighborhood Patterns in Miami-Dade County . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Miami-Dade County Urban Centers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Urban Center Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Urban Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Public Realm by Design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Creation of Public Space . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Neighborhood Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Single-Family Residential Street Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Multi-Family Street Sections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Multi-Family Residential Street Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Commercial Street Perspective . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Blocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Single-Family Residential Block . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Residential Blocks as Transition Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Commercial Blocks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Open Space . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Open-Space Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Residential Open-Space Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Commercial Open-Space Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
Residential Building Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Development Patterns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Density . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
Low-Density Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Medium-Density Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
High-Density Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
Generalized Neighborhood Development Pattern . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Transit Oriented Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
Neighborhood Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Retrofit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Infill Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Illustrative Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
Regional Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Composition Single-Family . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
Composition Multi-Family . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Sustainable Green Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
A Partially Annotated Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
ii
Before attempting to consider in detail the various practical problems of town planning,
it will be useful if we can understand something of the reasons which exist for the general
lack of beauty in our towns, and further if we try to arrive at some principles to guide us
in determining in individual cases what treatment is likely to lead to a beautiful result and
what to the reverse . . . We have become so used to living among surroundings in which
beauty has little or no place that we do not realize what a remarkable and unique feature
the ugliness of modern life is.
Raymond Unwin, 1919, from his book Town Planning in Practice: An Introduction to the Art of Designing
Cities and Suburbs.
iii
Introduction
Purpose of the Manual
The purpose of the manual is to illustrate the basic urban design principles which can significantly
improve the quality of physical development in
unincorporated Miami-Dade County. The manual
provides criteria to be used by designers, developers, County staff, and Community Councils,
all of whom are responsible for aspects of physical development in the County. This document
should be circulated widely and used as a tool to
help educate the public about urban design.
The manual illustrates various urban design concepts that contribute to a cohesive, functional
urban development pattern. The goal is the systematic integration of site plans that establish
connectivity at the pedestrian and vehicular level
through the use of consistent urban design principles. The plans depicted in this manual illustrate
techniques that can be used to address specific
site planning situations.
The urban design principles illustrated and described in this manual identify acceptable and
preferred design examples of ways to implement
the urban form guidelines and other policies of
the Miami-Dade County Comprehensive Development Master Plan (CDMP) pertaining to community land use, housing patterns, and design. Al-
INTRODUCTION
A Brief History
The principles of urban design are not unique
to any particular historical period. They are an
accumulation of knowledge over time, based on
a positive human perception of space. Spaces,
both in urbanism and architecture, that are in
scale with the human body result in a feeling of
physical comfort within the built environment.
In 1919, English designer Raymond Unwin wrote
the definitive text on community design: Town
Planning and Practice. The concepts described
in this book provide a strong foundation for effective neighborhood and town design. Several
city and town planning movements consistent
with Unwins ideas were most influential in the
development of neighborhoods in the United
States, including Miami-Dade County, during the
early part of the 20th Century. The two most
prominent were the City Beautiful Movement
and the Garden City Movement.
The City Beautiful Movement emerged from
the general perception, in the late 19th Century, that American cities were unattractive
and unhealthy places to live, due in part to fast
unplanned development responding to a rapidly
growing US population. This Movement can be
most clearly identified by characteristics that
include monumentally scaled buildings and long,
wide, tree-lined thoroughfares, both diagonal
and picturesque that intersect with existing
streets and converge at prominent sites and
parks. The idea was to overlay these urban
design principles onto existing street networks
and block grids, as done in Chicago, or to be
implemented in new development, as well as,
other small residential subdivisions throughout
the US. Though Coral Gables is South Floridas
best example of The City Beautiful Movement,
many other communities such as Miami Shores
and Opa-Locka were designed with the same
principles in mind.
The Garden City Movement initiated by Sir Ebenezer Howard promoted self-sustaining towns
arranged in a concentric street and block pattern
fitted with open spaces, parks and integrated
business, as well as, industrial uses within walking distance from residences. The ideal garden
town was limited in size and population, surrounded by agriculture or green belts and connected to major cities by rail. The Movement
was a response to a growing population living
in unpleasant conditions with close proximity
to the heavy industrial facilities within the city.
A closer look at early 20th century Florida communities such as Venice, designed by John Nolen,
George Merricks Coral Gables, Miami Shores,
Opa-Locka, Miami Beach, and Miami, reveals a
blend of the two movements within their urban
framework.
Even as these early communities were emerging, new concepts of urban planning and design
were arising, which challenged the ideas of these
movements, mainly due to the increasing dependencies on the automobile. The use of the car
facilitated the separation of land uses, intending
to distance housing from nearby industrial areas.
After World War II, mass-produced residential
subdivisions comprised much of the new development in South Florida, neglecting the qualities
of the earlier town planning movements. The
phrase, suburban sprawl best describes this
period of development as it continues today.
While suburban sprawl has been the most prevalent type of development since the middle of
the 20th Century, one exception to this pattern
of development in South Florida is the Town of
Miami Lakes. Miami Lakes nautilus street pattern draws upon the baroque radial city plan and
includes a mixed-use main street at the core of
the town, surrounded by residential communities, connected by a series of concentrically arranged streets. Small pocket parks, greens and
Coral Gables
Planned in the 1920s, Coral Gables is South Floridas best example of The City Beautiful Movement.
Venice
The plan for Venice, Florida, undertaken in 1926, has a town
square framed by retail uses and is located at the end of a grand
boulevard that runs to the Gulf.
A Brief History
Miami Lakes
The concentric plan for Miami Lakes, developed in the 1960s, was at the forefront of town planning in South Florida.
In the last several years, urban planners and designers have looked more towards patterns like
that of Miami Lakes to guide the development
of todays communities. This trend reflects a
national movement in the design and redesign
of communities called The New Urbanism.
The town of Seaside, in the Florida panhandle,
began in the 1980s and is considered a major
turning point in the practice of town planning.
Miami-Dade County adopted the Traditional
Neighborhood Development (TND) ordinance
in 1992, largely due to the influence of Seaside.
This ordinance, the first of its kind in the country, provides the guidelines for new neighborhood design utilizing the principles of good
urban design. In addition, Miami-Dade County
has introduced the Urban Design Center, which
has been responsible for initiating and carrying
out charrettes, the countys preferred planning
method to encourage public participation and
formulate recommendations for Small Area
Plans. These Small Area Plans are the foundation
for new zoning districts that codify the principles
of urban design included in this manual. It is the
intent of Miami-Dade County to further the
implementation of these principles through its
Comprehensive Development Master Plan policies and evolution of the zoning code.
Seaside
Designed in 1980 and located in Floridas panhandle, Seaside has become the international model
for Traditional Neighborhood Development.
A BRIEF HISTORY
1920s
Planned by George Merrick in the 1920s, Coral Gables exemplifies the City Beautiful Movement in South Florida. A
modified grid of streets converge at greens or significantly
sited parcels suitable for monumentally scaled civic buildings,
which also serve as focal points for the community. An interconnected network of pedestrian scaled blocks and streets
provide multiple routes to access land uses and parks as well
as defining corridors.
A BRIEF HISTORY
1950s
This post WWII neighborhood in the City of Miami incorporates some of the earlier principles of 20th century planning
such as convenience retail services at local street intersections. Land uses are becoming less integrated in the block
and parking areas adjoin streets instead of located behind
buildings. As in earlier communities, blocks remain pedestrian
scaled and the street network is uninterrupted.
1960s
1990s
In the last few years, Miami-Dade County has embraced principles of urban design that are prevalent in earlier 20th century
neighborhoods. The aerial shows a Traditional Neighborhood
Development (TND) in south Miami-Dade County. The short
blocks and interconnected network of streets allow pedestrians and vehicles to access all areas of the neighborhood. Different uses are mixed within the same block or vertically in the
same building.
A BRIEF HISTORY
The Miami-Dade County Comprehensive Development Master Plan (CDMP) designates a number of areas around transit
as Urban Centers. The aerial shows Downtown Kendall, an
Urban Center evolving in and around the Dadeland Mall shopping complex. Regulating plans guide intensity of development,
open space allocation and street connectivity. Strict criteria for
building placement, building height, and parking provides for a
pedestrian oriented public realm.
The Miami-Dade County Comprehensive Development Master Plan designates a number of locations around transit as Urban Centers. Urban
Centers are planned as hubs for future urban development in Miami-Dade County, around which
a more compact and efficient urban structure will
evolve. These Urban Centers are intended to be
moderate-to high-intensity design-unified areas,
which will contain a concentration of different
urban functions integrated both horizontally
and vertically. Three scales of Urban Centers
are defined in the CDMP: Regional, the largest,
notably the downtown Miami central business
district; Metropolitan, such as the Dadeland
area; and Community, which will serve localized
areas. Such Urban Centers shall be characterized by physical cohesiveness, direct accessibility by the mass transit service and high quality
urban design. Regional and Metropolitan Urban
Centers, as described below, shall have convenient, preferably direct connections to a nearby
expressway or major roadways, to ensure a high
level of countywide accessibility.
Broward County
Miami-Dade County
The map to the right indicates the location of Urban Centers within Miami-Dade County.
EDGE
CENTER
CORE
Naranja Community Urban Center Plan: This Plan demonstrates the Core, Center and Edge, the basic concept for all Urban Centers.
Urban Center plans do not include areas outside of the Urban Development Boundary.
A BRIEF HISTORY
Urban Design
Urban design is the comprehensive integration Interconnected street network - An interof exterior spaces and structures that comprise
connected street network improves mobility
the built environment. The intent is to produce a
by providing more options to reach a destipublic realm of attractive and comfortable places
nation and the dispersal of traffic, as well as
in which people will feel inclined to dwell. All
by making it easier for pedestrians to access
scales of development can be improved through
more direct routes between destinations.
the application of urban design principles. These
Features of an interconnected network of
principles help to define community character by
streets include a hierarchy of streets, comthe manipulation of blocks and streets, building
plete streets, shorter walkable blocks, and
setbacks, landscape, building height and massmore frequent intersections to calm traffic.
ing, and architectural articulation. Applied to site
planning and architecture, urban design concepts Human scale - Human scale is the relationship
can result in public spaces, including streets,
of space and objects to the proportion and cawhich adequately accommodate and enhance
pability of the human body. For a public space
both pedestrian and automobile use. Urban
to feel comfortable, the individual must exdesign can produce communities sympathetic
perience a positive relationship to the space.
to human scale and corridors that significantly
Human scale is the basis of urban design as
increase pedestrian participation. Successful urit pertains to the dimensions of objects and
ban design produces diversity, distinctiveness and
spaces including block sizes, street widths,
a sense of place within the community.
walking distances, building heights and architectural details.
Good urban design is characterized by, among
other things:
Focal points - Focal points are elements that
provide visual identity and a sense of unique Well-defined open spaces - Well-defined
ness within the community. They include such
open spaces are an important component of
elements as squares and greens, fountains and
urban design and are an integral element of a
statuary and important civic buildings or any
neighborhood. Streets, buildings or landscape
other space or form that helps identify a parshould clearly define the edges of open spaces.
ticular neighborhood. Focal points should be
Properly planned open spaces offer areas for
placed in prominent locations or terminating
social interaction, recreation as well as provide
street vistas.
the foreground for civic structures or monuments.
Variety of building types - A variety of
building types accommodates different uses,
Defined block edges - Defined block edges
lifestyles and enhances a sense of community.
help form the physical containers of public
Neighborhoods should be designed to elicit a
space. Block edges are defined by buildings
diversity of building types, uses and residents.
placed close to the street following uniform
front setbacks. They can be reinforced by the Compatibility - A cohesive neighborhood
addition of low walls, fences or hedges along
environment depends on buildings that
the front property line or between buildings,
complement one another. The height, mass
thus clearly distinguishing the public from the
and location of buildings as well as the uses
private realm.
contained within them, create patterns that
10
Top: In this example, the green is clearly defined by landscaping, sidewalks, streets and the
buildings that front it along its perimeter. Bottom: Here, the houses are positioned near to
the street providing a continuous building line along the block edges and making a clear distinction between the public and private realms.
Urban Design
Top Left: This example illustrates a mix of uses placed adjacent to the sidewalk. Pedestrian-scaled lighting, street trees and articulated building facades
contribute to a sense of human scale. Top Right: Focal points in a community provide identity and visual orientation. In this example, the Coral Gables
City Hall partially terminates the Miracle Mile axis. Bottom Left: Sidewalks are a vital component of a community. This example illustrates residents
taking advantage of some of the benefits of a walkable neighborhood. Bottom Right: In this example, multi-family apartment buildings and townhouses
are found adjacent to each other facing a green, providing different housing options within the same community.
URBAN DESIGN
11
12
URBAN DESIGN
13
1 to 1 ratio
The 1 to 1 ratio is an ideal cross-section resulting in a positive human scale relationship. Although this section occurs in
older cities, particularly in Europe, it seldom occurs along South Florida roadways. The 1 to 1 ratio is ideal for pedestrian
passages.
1 to 3 ratio
The ratio of 1 to 3 is an effective minimum section for South Florida roadways. It produces a sense of enclosure and a
positive human-scale relationship.
1 to 6 ratio
The ratio of 1 to 6 is the absolute maximum road section width to street wall. The use of street trees will enhance this
section, and allow for the ratio to seem less severe.
Adapted from Site Community and Urban Planning Ninth Edition of Architectural Graphic Standards by Gary Greenan, Andres Duany, Elizabeth Plater- Zyberk,
Kamal Zeharin and Iskander Shafie.
14
Neighborhood Development
By Recess Line
Taller buildings establish an appropriate street section by the design of the building base to relate to street width. This condition
can be achieved with the use of elements such as colonnades or extended overhangs.
By Facade
A 1 to 2 ratio can easily be accomplished in lower scale residential development, particularly for higher density attached residential uses such as townhouses.
By Landscaping
In this example, street trees instead of buildings produce a 1 to 2 ratio. In South Florida this is the prevalent condition in singlefamily detached residential areas. However, the use of buildings rather than landscape to create the street section is usually more
successful in defining space. The building to building section should not exceed a 1 to 6 ratio regardless of whether trees are
used. Generally, a 1 to 3 building section is most appropriate for a residential street section.
Source: Architectural Graphic Standards, Ninth Edition American Institute of Architects, p.86.
URBAN DESIGN
15
This residential neighborhood incorporates many of the elements that provide a pleasant living environment. Entrances are clearly defined
and porches provide a transitional space between the public area and the interior of the unit. Parking is provided to the rear of units thereby
providing uninterrupted pedestrian movement along the sidewalk.
16
This illustration of a low-density residential street shows successful spatial definition of the public realm, which is a result of a street cross section that produces
visual enclosure and a positive human scale. The ratio of street width to adjacent building walls generates a place of singular character.
URBAN DESIGN
17
This residential cross section has a ratio of approximately 1 to 7, which falls outside the maximum ratio of 1 to 6. The sense of enclosure is lost, and human
scale does not exist. Trees offer little in this broad expanse of pavement.
In this example, the ratio is slightly below 1 to 3, which produces a distinct sense of enclosure. Trees, a median, and balconies reinforce human scale, resulting
in a comfortable outdoor room. Parking would be placed to the rear or side of buildings in this example.
18
This residential section is approximately 1 to 7. The excessive front setback with parking is the critical element making this section inappropriate.
In this example, the ratio is approximately 1 to 4 and results in a positive human scale. Trees and balconies further enhance human scale.
URBAN DESIGN
19
Although street trees make a green path through this mid-rise apartment
complex, the wide road cross section minimizes a sense of human scale and
eliminates neighborhood connections.
In this wide cross section, the use of landscape and usable public space in the form of a paseo, enhance human scale. Landscape and low walls provide a comfortable transition from street and sidewalk to the apartment entrances.
20
The design failure of this retail street section results largely from excessive setbacks and surface parking. Human scale does not exist and movement between
adjacent developments must be largely achieved by automobile.
This mixed-use center fronts on an arterial road. Uniformity of the street facade is the result of similar building heights, definition of the building base and window detailing.
Variety in the street facade is achieved by a slight variation of architectural detailing, variety of roof designs and the placement of articulated entrances at block corners,
creating a sense of entry.
URBAN DESIGN
21
Blocks
Sprawl Grid
Block pattern composition in a typical suburban subdivision is often a network of isolated
building tracts and dead-end streets. Automobile traffic is diverted to a nearby collector street in an attempt to reduce traffic on
local residential streets. The resulting street
network is discontinuous, creating excessive
congestion on the collectors and arterials,
and is confusing and dangerous for drivers.
Anomalous block shapes disorient pedestrians and decrease opportunities for creating
neighborhood sociability and focal points.
22
Grid Block
Blocks arranged along a grid plan offer good
orientation and traffic dispersal throughout
the street network. To avoid monotony,
some variation in block length and orientation is desirable. Grid plans benefit from
highly articulated architecture to visually
reinforce the grid. Small squares distributed
throughout the neighborhood provide focal
points for sub-neighborhood areas.
URBAN DESIGN
23
These sketches demonstrate the development of the block as a transitional element between higher and lower density residential development.
24
URBAN DESIGN
25
Commercial Blocks
Appropriate
This plan for a 20-acre community business district shows the placement of buildings along the
street edge, thereby defining the shopping block and partially concealing parking. The extensive
planting of street trees helps shield the adjacent multi-family residential neighborhood from the
parking area. The corner square at the center of the drawing produces a focal point for public
activity including a transit stop and pickup and drop-off area, as well as a place for outdoor dining. The development of a shopping center as a series of blocks, integrates the center with the
adjacent residential community.
Inappropriate
The placement of the parking lot in front of the
buildings creates a gap along the street. This
condition results in a lack of block definition,
and a very wide road cross-section without human scale, resulting in a hostile environment for
both pedestrians and drivers. This commercial
center layout is typical throughout Miami-Dade
County and has resulted in a negative perception of space along many corridors.
26
Commercial Blocks
Appropriate
This regional business district is developed as a series of blocks, providing a transition to the
adjacent residential uses. A green (paseo) acts as a connecting element between business
and residential areas. The use of structures reduces the visual and spatial impact of surface
parking. Retail and office uses front the parking structures, thereby encouraging pedestrian
activity along the streets.
Inappropriate
This shopping center lacks any relationship
to adjacent development, pedestrians or
transit riders. It produces no street edge
definition and results in a lack of integration with adjacent areas. This design is
characteristic of the regional center concepts predominant in the 1950s through
the 1980s.
URBAN DESIGN
27
Open Space
Great Parks
Great Public Spaces
Great Natural and Cultural Places
Great Greenways, Trails, and Water Trails
Great Streets
Access
Every resident should be able to safely and comfortably walk, bicycle, drive and/or ride transit
from their home to work, school, parks, shopping and community facilities.
Equity
Every resident should be able to enjoy the same
quality of public facilities and services regardless
of income, age, race, ability or geographic location.
Sustainability
Every action and improvement of the Park System, including facilities, programs, operations
and management, should contribute to the economic, social and environmental prosperity of the
County.
Rural
Multiple benefits
Every single public action should generate multiple public benefits to maximize taxpayer dollars.
Sub-urban
Urban
28
The above images are from the MDC Park Structure and Landscape Pattern
Book, pages 65 through 67.
Open-Space Types
Corner Attached
Square
Mid-Block Green
Close
Urban Wedge
Roundabout
Attached Square
URBAN DESIGN
29
Open-Space Types
Market Plaza
The market plaza is a partially paved area for intensive use such as weekend markets. A plaza may also be used as a front place for public buildings and religious
structures, and other buildings of public gathering.
Green
Similar to a central square, the green can be used as an urban space at the center
of the community. The central green was the predominant form of open space in
early American towns. Central greens should be defined on all sides by a road and
clearly defined by architecture and landscape. In this example, both residences
and public buildings are placed overlooking the green.
Parks
Parks are naturalistic open spaces used for active and passive recreational use.
Generally parks should be located at the edge of the neighborhood, preferably in
natural areas, or should be landscaped in a naturalistic manner. Parks combined
with schools make a logical connection between neighborhoods.
Buffer
The buffer is a form of green that reduces the impact on residential areas of traffic
on an adjacent street. In this example, higher density residential development is
placed around the buffer, while larger lot development with greater front setbacks buffer the traffic noise on the opposite side of the street.
Adapted from: Architectural Graphic Standards - Ninth Edition.
30
This is an example of a plan that equally distributes open spaces as focal points throughout the neighborhood.
URBAN DESIGN
The central green or square acts as the heart of the community. Architecture and landscape should be used to clearly
define the edges.
31
This axonometric illustrates the use of an attached commercial square to reinforce the definition of the road intersection. Additionally, the use of arcades
provides shade and human scale. The square offers an area for pedestrian congregation.
32
Rural Yard
This type is most appropriately used as a
large-lot use outside the Urban Development Boundary, or as a transitional use
abutting agricultural or large-lot subdivisions. Unlike other residential building
types, the relation to the street is not
critical and the use of the lot for agricultural purposes can reinforce the rural
character.
URBAN DESIGN
Perimeter Yard
The perimeter yard (detached single family) has a yard space along
the perimeter of all lot lines. In the first illustrated example, parking is
placed at the rear of the lot off of an alley, while the unit is placed close
to the sidewalk. Placement of the unit at the front of the lot helps to
define the street space. In the second and third examples, parking is accessed from the street, but the garage is placed away from the sidewalk
so that it does not become a dominant element on the front elevation.
In all three cases, porches act as transitional elements between street
and home.
33
Duplex
In this example, the duplex (two-family dwelling) is
placed close to the front of the lot, while parking is
placed to the rear behind the units, producing a good
street relationship. An alley could also be used to access parking and utilities.
34
Side Yard
The side yard house orients the house towards the
side yard space. This is an excellent building type to use
on narrow lots and in zero-lot-line development. This
illustration of the side yard house was adapted from
the Charleston house, a characteristic type used in
Charleston, South Carolina. The example has alley access which leaves the side yard open, thus, the unit is
brought closer to the street and sidewalk, resulting in a
positive road cross section and definition of the public
space.
Courtyard
One or more outdoor spaces enclosed by the walls of
the unit define the courtyard type. These spaces can
also be defined by walls of adjacent buildings. Placing
parking off an alley creates a more attractive street
frontage. The courtyard unit can be either attached or
detached.
Townhouse (Rowhouse)
This house type is placed parallel to the sidewalk and
occupies the entire lot width. It is the most urban of
the single-family residential types. The building faade
defines the edge of the street, while the rear of the lot
includes private open space, parking or additional living
units above the garage. This drawing illustrates alley access for parking which eliminates the need for parking
in the front yard. Townhouses are appropriately placed
near the town or neighborhood center, particularly if
developed with alleys which allow street frontage for
on-street parking.
URBAN DESIGN
Apartment
Apartment types can be classified in three subtypes,
the individual building, the courtyard building and the
bar building. The courtyard type offers private outdoor
spaces in the form of an internal courtyard. All apartment buildings should be placed close to the street to
help define the public street space. Parking should be
placed to the rear yard or concealed in parking structures. Where feasible, additional parking could be on
the street.
35
Development Patterns
The Transect
The transect is a system of classification deploying a conceptual range from rural to urban of the
typical elements of urbanism. For example, a
street is more urban than a road, a curb more urban than a swale, a brick wall more urban than a
wooden one, an allee of trees more urban than a
cluster. This gradient when rationalized and subdivided, becomes the urban transect, the basis of
a common zoning system.
RURAL TRANSECTURBAN
The continuum of the Transect, when subdivided, forms the basis of the zoning categories:
Rural, Sub-Urban, General Urban, Urban Center
and Urban Core.
RURAL
PRESERVE
EU-1C
EU-1
EU-S
EU-M
RURAL
RESERVE
SUBURBAN
AU
EU-2
EU-1C
EU-1
EU-5
EU-M
RU-1
RU-2
RU-TH
RU-3M
RU-RH
RU-4L
RU-4M
RU-4
RU-4A
BU-1
Neighborhood Retail
BU-1A
Limited Retail
BU-2
Special Retail
RU-4
RU-4A
BU-2
URBAN
CENTER
URBAN
CORE
CIVIC
Note: The Urban Center Ordinance, the Planned Area Development Ordinance and the Traditional Neighborhood Ordinance may include several to all
components of the Transect
GENERAL
URBAN
RU-RH
RU-3M
RU-4L
RU-4M
BU-1A
PUBLIC
RU-1M(a)
RU-2
RU-TH
BU-1
PRIVATE
GU
36
RU-1
RU-1M(a)
RU-1M(b)
AU
GU
EU-3
Density
Density: the theoretical capacity of a lot to
accommodate residential intensity. It is a code
technique to designate the number of dwellings
which may be accommodated within a standard
measure of land area. Usually it is expressed in
units/acre.
220 ft.
24 rods
Maximum Density: the capacity of a lot, usually determined by parking capacity and required
open space, not by lot coverage or floor-area
ratio. Thus the size and configuration of a lot is
an important determinant of density insofar as it
can efficiently accommodate parking. Generally,
structured parking will be required with buildings
greater than 25 units per acre.
Typical 2-Acre
RURAL
Specific Type
villa
villa
villa / house
villa / house
house
house
house
Net Density
1 unit / 5 ac
1 unit / ac
2.42 units / ac
4.65 units / ac
5.81 units / ac
6.97 units / ac
7.75 units / ac
Zoning
EU-2
EU-1
EU-M
RU-1
RU-M (b)
RU-1M (a)
RU-1Z
URBAN
Specific Type
duplex
Net Density
Zoning
rowhouse/
townhouse
rowhouse/
townhouse
rowhouse/
townhouse
apartment block
courtyard apt.
block
8 units / ac
8.5-12 units / ac
12.9 units / ac
4.65 units / ac
23 units / ac
35.9 units / ac
50 units / ac
RU-2
RU-RH / RU-TH
RU-3M
RU-4L
RU-4M
RU-4M
RU-4 / RU-4A
Net Density: a dependable measure of the efficiency of a building type as it excludes the highly
variable areas of thoroughfare and open space
included in gross density calculations.
Gross Density: a measure of total number of
units including roads and open space.
apartment
Note: These examples do not show common open space that is required in many of the zoning districts.
DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS
37
Low-Density Development
Low-Density Development
This illustration of a residential neighborhood shows houses placed close to the sidewalk defining the block edges by following uniform setbacks. The public and private realms
are clearly distinguished and porches provide a transitional area between the street and the interior of the homes. A green is an integral element of this neighborhood and
provides an area for recreation as well as social interaction for its residents.
38
Medium-Density Development
Medium-Density Development
This image illustrates a pedestrian-friendly medium-density community. An interconnected network of streets together with short block sizes, buildings placed close to the
street and parking located behind them allow residents to walk with ease throughout the neighborhood. A variety of building types accommodates different uses and lifestyles,
while the large central open space offers an area for social interaction and recreation.
DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS
39
High-Density Development
This illustration shows those design elements that result in human scale relationships including bases, colonnades for weather protection and clearly defined
open spaces. Scale is also achieved with tall buildings by designing the first several stories to relate to the street and sidewalk, while the remaining stories are set
further back, basically out of the view from the pedestrian. By using these urban design elements a high density community can be created.
40
2. The section line, half section line, and quartersection line road system should form a continuous
network, interrupted only when it would destroy
the integrity of a neighborhood or development, or
when there is a significant physical impediment. Pedestrian and vehicular traffic networks should serve
as physical links between neighborhoods, with multiple points of access between neighborhoods.
3. Within a section, a variety of residential types and
densities are encouraged, with higher densities being located at the periphery, and lower densities in
the interior.
4. Intersections of section line roads shall serve
as focal points of activity, hereafter referred to as
activity nodes. Activity nodes shall be occupied by
any non-residential components of the neighborhood including public and semi-public uses. When
commercial uses are warranted, they should be
located within these activity nodes. In addition, of
the various residential densities which may be approved in a section through density averaging or on
an individual site basis, the higher density residential
use should be located at or near the activity nodes.
The Generalized Neighborhood Development Pattern contained in the CDMP Guidelines for Urban Form is a schematic
guide to the pattern of neighborhood land uses and relative
development densities and intensities recommended by the
CDMP to occur within the square-mile section grid of the
County. The illustrations which follow demonstrate one of
many possible physical design solutions that would comply with
the CDMP criteria.
The general pattern of land use in residential communities
should conform to the following guidelines consistent with
the land use patterns and densities authorized and encouraged
by the Land Use Plan (LUP) map. Future amendments to the
LUP map should reflect the promotion of this localized form
within the metropolitan pattern of urban centers and transit
corridors.
1. The section line road should form the physical boundaries of
neighborhoods.
The above criteria is from the CDMP, pages I-26 through I-29.
DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS
41
This drawing highlights land use intensities in accordance with the Generalized Neighborhood Development Pattern. Commercial and office uses are
placed at the edge fronting on section-line roads.
Higher intensity residential is also incorporated as
a transition to lower density residential areas. A
school and park site provides a connection to adjacent neighborhoods.
This plan complies with the CDMP criteria and provides a mix of
uses including commercial, multi-family residential and attached and
detached single family. Higher intensity has been placed along the
arterials. A central green and square provide a central focus for this
neighborhood. Attached and detached squares and greens are evenly
distributed and provide open space and sub-neighborhood identity.
42
This diagram highlights the distribution of openspaces in the form of greens, squares and parks.
The placement of these spaces define and identify
sub-neighborhood areas.
Low-Density Residential
Low-density residential, including courtyard,
side yard, and perimeter housing, establishes
a precedence for low density uses across the
minor arterial. Greens have been used to designate sub-neighborhood areas and provide
open space.
DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS
Multi-Family Residential
Multi-family uses placed close to the center
green are buffered by lower density uses.
Retail Center
A shopping center has been placed at the intersection of two arterial roadways. Buildings
have been placed to define the edge of the
block, with parking screened from surrounding roadways. A green acts as a transitional
element between commercial and residential
uses and provides easy access from the residential area to shopping.
Transitional Area
Apartments and offices have been placed
along the arterial as transitions to potential
residential uses.
43
These illustrations depict design features that make it more convenient for communities to use public transportation. Adequate density, a
walkable environment with mixed-use buildings and well-designed open spaces make the area around the transit station or stop feel inviting,
usable and secure, therefore creating effective developments oriented to transit.
44
Neighborhood Development
Source: Text adapted from a talk by Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk at the Aspen Institute,
Suburbs and Cities: on Changing Patterns in Metropolitan Living, 1995.
DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS
Neighborhood Development
Mix of Housing
The TND ordinance provides for a mix
of housing types including detached single
family (perimeter yard), townhouses and
apartments.
46
Center
The center provides a focal point for community activities. Activity in the square is
enhanced by retail, a religious building and
higher density residential dwellings.
Edge
In this example, lower density single family homes have been placed adjacent to
a linear park. The park provides a buffer
between the residential and commercial
uses placed on an arterial road.
Neighborhood Development
Transit Stop
The location of a transit stop within walking distance of most homes increases
the likelihood of its use. Here the transit
stop is conveniently located at the town
square.
DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS
Civic Buildings
Civic buildings should be placed at prominent locations. The yard of a religious
facility doubles as a multiple use area for
religious and neighborhood activities.
47
Retrofit
Retrofitting is the redesign and updating of existing development to incorporate urban design
principles. An existing regional shopping center
was selected to show an example of the way
an isolated suburban superblock development
can be redeveloped incrementally over time
using urban design principles to integrate the
surrounding community. The illustrations depict
the way in which a system of blocks can be created to enable a phased approach applied over a
period of years or interrupted at any point.
Phase 1
Phase 2
Phase 3
Phase 4
Existing Condition
The first step is to establish a formal center.
Phase 2
The primary element in this phase is the development of a mixed use block and street system.
Structured parking replaces surface parking.
Blocks are developed following existing vehicular
systems. Liner buildings with shops screen parking garages. Pedestrian passages connect to parking and future block connections.
Phase 3
In Phase 3, multi-family residential along the periphery has been added. Greens and squares act
as focal points for the residential component and
define sub-neighborhood areas.
Phase 4
In Phase 4, additional blocks are created. Auto
and pedestrian access is increased as a result of
connecting roads to development outside of the
center.
Phase 5
Phase 5 shows the completed retrofit of the site
into a major urban neighborhood. The layout establishes a precedent for development patterns
in surrounding areas.
48
Phase 5
Infill Development
Infill development is building on vacant or underutilized parcels of land within an existing urban
area. This promotes the betterment of the community and can be characterized by higher densities, compactness and an effective use of land.
Ideal locations for infill development include
major corridors, parcels adjacent or near transit, brown-fields, red-fields and existing urban
neighborhoods. Infill development can complete
the urban fabric of a neighborhood with projects
that support transit, provide housing opportunities, revitalize neighborhoods and provide
accessible services. Infill development reduces
traffic congestion, preserves open space, leaves
agricultural as well as rural areas undeveloped,
creates a more livable community and provides
an alternative to urban sprawl.
Infill development should harmonize with its surrounding buildings, enhancing the quality of the neighborhood and
promoting its character.
DEVELOPMENT PATTERNS
49
Illustrative Examples
Open-Space Types Used:
Corner Attached
Square or Green
Spatial Definition:
Ratio 1:3
Building Types:
Townhouse
50
Perimeter Yard
Side Yard
This neighborhood located in south Miami-Dade County includes the following urban design concepts:
1. The mix of housing types includes townhouses, perimeter yard units, and side yard units.
2. Porches are provided on perimeter yard houses as a transitional element between unit, street and
sidewalk.
3. A civic-use building and clubhouse face plazas which act as neighborhood focal points.
4. A double-frontage road is provided to buffer townhouses from traffic along an adjacent arterial.
Illustrative Examples
Detached Square
or Green
Attached Square
or Green
Corner Attached
Square or Green
Green
Ratio 1:3
Building Types:
Townhouse
ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
Perimeter Yard
Side Yard
51
Illustrative Examples
Corner Attached
Square or Green
Attached Square
or Green
Close
Spatial Definition:
Ratio 1:3
Building Types:
Townhouse
52
Perimeter Yard
This neighborhood located in south Miami-Dade County includes the following urban design concepts:
1. The mix of housing types includes townhouses, perimeter yard units, and side yard units.
2. Porches are provided on perimeter yard houses as a transitional element between unit, street and
sidewalk.
3. A civic-use building and clubhouse face plazas which act as neighborhood focal points.
4. A double-frontage road is provided to buffer townhouses from traffic along an adjacent arterial.
Illustrative Examples
Detached Square
Plaza
Ratio 1:3
Ratio 1:2
Building Types:
Townhouse
ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
Perimeter Yard
Side Yard
This 80-acre site is located in south Miami-Dade County and incorporates single-family, apartments, and retail uses. The design elements include:
1. A mix of uses, includes single-family and retail.
2. The storm-water retention area requirement is provided by a lake which penetrates the
entire neighborhood in a picturesque matter.
3. Public access to the lake is provided by roadways and bridges.
4. Open space is distributed equally throughout the neighborhood.
5. The block and street network interconnects the neighborhood. Sidewalks are provided
throughout.
6. Alleys provide additional parking access, trash collection and the potential for additional
housing placed along the alley. Alleys eliminate the need to park in the front yard area.
53
Illustrative Examples
Detached Square
or Green
Corner Attached
Square
Park
Spatial Definition:
Ratio 1:2
Ratio 1:3
Building Types:
This site, located in north Miami-Dade County, is adjacent to a golf course/park and comprised entirely of
townhouses. The urban design elements include:
1. A central square and two attached squares provide neighborhood focal points.
2. All cross streets terminate on the golf course, thus visually linking the golf course to the neighborhood.
3. A sidewalk along the golf course provides direct visual access to open space.
Townhouse
54
Illustrative Examples
Detached Square
or Green
Close
Corner Attached
Square or Green
Ratio 1:6
Ratio 1:3
Ratio 1:2
Building Types:
This mixed-use development located in south Miami-Dade County includes the following design elements:
1. Mixed uses include retail and townhouses.
2. The storm-water retention area is developed as a central lake and acts as a focal point for the development.
3. Retail has been designed with double frontage for direct access from the residential area.
4. Greens are provided for passive recreational activities and as neighborhood focal points.
Townhouse
ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
55
Illustrative Examples
Detached Square
or Green
Plaza
Roundabout
Spatial Definition:
Ratio 1:3
Building Types:
Townhouse
Apartment
56
Illustrative Examples
Plaza
Detached
Square or Green
Corner Attached
Square or Green
Ratio 1:3
Ratio 1:2
Building Types:
Townhouse
Perimeter Yard
This development, located in south Miami-Dade County, combines apartments, townhouses, perimeter yard, and retail uses. The urban design elements include the following features:
1. The town square provides the connection between the residential and retail uses.
2. Additional greens provide passive recreational uses and act as focal points within the neighborhood.
3. A shopping center is located at one edge of the site and is integrated with the neighborhood
through the use of squares and pedestrian walkways.
ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
57
Illustrative Examples
Detached Square
or Green
Detached Square
or Green
Corner Attached
Square or Green
Attached
Square
Spatial Definition:
Ratio 1:3
Ratio 1:2
Townhouse
58
This 120-acre site is located in west Miami-Dade County and incorporates the following urban design
concepts.
1. The site meets the storm water retention area requirement in the form of a lake. The lake is designed
as an integral and unifying element of the neighborhood.
2. Public access to the lake is provided by roadways and bridges.
3. Open-space is distributed equally throughout the neighborhood as focal points for sub-neighborhood
areas.
4. The neighborhood center is defined by townhouses arranged along a circular roadway.
5. Housing types include apartments, perimeter yard units and townhouses.
6. Alleys provide additional access for parking and trash collection as well as a potential for additional
housing units. The use of alleys eliminates the need to park in the front yard area and act as buffers
between rear yards.
Perimeter Yard
Illustrative Examples
Detached Square
or Green
Attached
Square
Close
Market
Plaza
Park
Ratio 1:2
Building Types:
Townhouse
Perimeter Yard
ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
Courtyard
This 400 acre site located in northwest Miami-Dade County includes a mix of townhouses,
perimeter yard units, apartments and courtyard units. The plan incorporates the following
urban design elements:
1. The stormwater mitigation requirement has been met by the design of a series of canals
surrounding a connected system of blocks and streets.
2. Squares and greens are strategically placed to define sub-neighborhood areas.
3. A street grid is modified with curved roads which add interest to the plan.
4. Focal points placed along the canal system have been provided throughout the plan.
5. Alleys provide rear access for additional parking, trash collection and act as buffers
between rear yards.
6. A number of streets have been placed adjacent to the canal to provide visual access.
Apartment
59
Architecture
This manual cannot be complete without a basic
discussion of architecture. It is not intended to
suggest architectural style or philosophy but
rather to demonstrate methods of design that reinforce the urban design concepts incorporated.
Modern, traditional and regional architecture can
be designed to create viable neighborhoods.
Architecture and design have always involved a
search for general laws of beauty. Is beauty in the
eye of the beholder or does it come about through
intrinsic properties of space? Three general principles: repetition, harmony, and variety lie at the basis
of beautiful designs. Repetition is achieved by using
a system that provides a set of proportions that are
repeated in a design or building at different scales.
Harmony is achieved through a system that provides
a small set of lengths or modules with many additive
properties which enables the whole to be created as
the sum of its parts while remaining entirely within
the system. Variety is provided by a system that provides a sufficient degree of versatility in its ability
to tile the plane with geometric figures. Any system
that provides the means to attain these objectives
has a chance to produce designs of interest.
Citation: Kappraff, Jay. Systems of Proportion in
Design and Architecture and their Relationship to
Dynamical Systems Theory. Department of Mathematics, New Jersey Institute of Technology. 23
December 1998.
60
This elevation demonstrates the use of architectural composition in community design unified by an expression line at the second floor.
This traditional example demonstrates the use of architectural elements that visually anchor the building to the ground. Windows are vertical in composition, roofs are pitched
and the elevation is articulated with architectural elements.
Regional Architecture
Florida Vernacular
Mission Style
Anglo/Caribbean
ARCHITECTURE
61
Composition: Single-Family
62
Composition: Multi-Family
Apartment Building
Harmony
Openings share proportions
ARCHITECTURE
63
Passive Design - The use of building orientation, porches, extended eaves, cross-ventilation,
high ceilings and transom windows are low-cost
design elements that maximize sustainable response to climate, thus reducing dependence on
mechanical systems and energy consumption.
Materials - The use of locally harvested or
manufactured materials reduces transportation
related energy consumption and also reinforces
the local economy. The preservation of historic
buildings and the recycling of building material is
important.
Energy and Water Use - The use of compact
fluorescent bulbs, energy efficient glass and Energy Star rated appliances are recommended.
When feasible the incorporation of solar panels,
photo-voltaic intelligent skins, green roofs, cisterns, grey-water recycling, and wind powered
alternative energies should be furthered. The
tropical environment of South Florida is ideal for
the use of solar panels and green roofs.
ARCHITECTURE
65
Single Family
Detached
Courtyard House
Detached/
Attached
Courtyard House
Detached/
Attached
Sideyard House
Detached/
Attached
Rowhouse
Attached
Note:
Create air movement through buildings. In rural areas, freestanding buildings with wrap-around porches are
appropriate. In suburban and urban areas, buildings should incorporate courtyards and porches; size and
location will vary according to orientation and size of parcel. In some areas breezeways may be necessary to
provide air movement to courtyards or rear areas. Building width is preferably one room deep, otherwise
incorporate operable clerestory transoms in the interiors to encourage air circulation. Porches that are a
minimum 7 deep permit outdoor living. Strategically locate landscaping around building to cool prevailing
summer breeze and reduce a sites micro-climate.
PASSIVE DESIGN - SMALL SCALE BUILDINGS
These techniques demonstrate methods of sustainable design for single-family and multi-family housing.
66
ARCHITECTURE
67
Note:
This building section by Le Corbusier provides cross-ventilation, with openings on both ends,
and mitigates the dependence on artificial lighting. This section only requires hallways and
elevator stops on every other floor.
GREEN ROOF
68
Landscape Design
69
70
Benevolo, Leonardo.
1981 Transit-Oriented Development Guidelines, Sacramento County Planning and Community Development Department.
Bentley, I. Alcock, A. Murrain, P. Mc Glynn, S. Smith, G.
Responsive Environment: A Manual for Designers, Butterworth Helnermann Ltd., Oxford, England, 1985.
Beny, Jeffrey, et. Al.
The Rebirth of Urban Democracy, Brookings Institution, 1993.
Beveridge, Charles E., et. Al.
Frederick Law Olmsted: Designing the American
Landscape, Rizzoli, 1995. [Olmsted, the designer of
Central Park, developed the Landscaped Suburb of
Riverside which became the model for large lot suburban landscaped communities].
Buder, Stanley.
Visionaries and Planners: The Garden City Movement
and the Modern Community,Oxford University Press,
1990.
Carmody, John.
Earth Sheltered Housing Design. New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1985.
Center for Urban Transportation Research.
1993 Impact of Community Design on Transportation.
University of South Florida.
City of Ottawa.
1993 Urban Design.
City of Seattle.
1993 Design Review Guidelines for Multifamily and
Commercial Buildings.
Congress for the New Urbanism.
Charter for the New Urbanism. 1993. [This charter
establishes the basic goals of the New Urbanism
Movement].
Crowther, Richard.
Ecologic ArchitectureBoston: Butterworth Architecture, 1992.
Burnham, Daniel.
Plan of Chicago, Princeton Architectural Press, 1994.
Downs, Anthony.
New Visions for Metropolitan America. Brookings
Institution/Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, 1994.
Butti, Ken.
A Golden Thread: 2500 years of Solar Architecture
and Technology. Palo Alto: Cheshire Books, 1980.
Downs, Anthony.
Stuck In Traffic: Coping with Peak-Hour Traffic Congestion. Brookings Institution, 1992.
Calthorpe, Peter.
The Next American Metropolis: Ecology, Community, and the American Dream, Princeton Architectural
Press, 1993. [Peter Calthorpe is the proponent of the
TOD (Transient Oriented Development) concepts of
linking communities with transportation nodal points].
Kemmis, Daniel.
Community and the Politics of Place. University of
Oklahoma Press, 1990.
Kemmis, Daniel.
The Good City and The Good Life. Houghton Mifflin,
1995.
Konya, Allan.
Design Primer for Hot Climates. Lonton: Architectural
Press, 1980.
Jackson, Kenneth T.
Crabgrass Frontier: The Suburbanization of the United
States. Oxford University Press, 1987.
Krier, Leon.
Architecture; Choice or Fate. Andreas Papadajkis,
Great Briton, 1998.
Jacobs, Allan B.
Great Streets. MIT Press, 1993.
Krier, Leon.
Rational Architecture: The Reconstruction of the European City. Editions des Archieves d Architecture Modernes, 1978. [This classic work was a major source in
the creation of the New Urbanism Movement].
Jacobs, Jane.
Cities and the Wealth of Nations: Principles of Economic Life. Random House, 1985.
Jacobs, Jane.
The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Vintage
Books, 1992. [This book by a sociologist highlighted
the social dangers of replacing the typical urban street
neighborhood to a higher density, low-income structures.]
James & James Ltd.
European Directory of Sustainable and Energy Efficient
Building, 1999.
Katz, Peter.
The New Urbanism: Toward an Architecture of Community. McGraw-Hill, 1994. [This book is a good overview of town plans, perspectives, and axonometrics of
the New Urbanism Movement].
Kelbaugh, Doug.
Common Place: Toward Neighborhood and Regional
Design. University of Washington Press, 1997.
Krier, Leon.
Leon Krier, Hoses, Palaces, Cities. Architectural Design AD Editions, New York, 1984.
Krier, Leon.
Leon Krier: Architecture and Urban Design. St. Martins Press, New York, 1992.
Krier, Rob.
Urban Space. Rizzoli International Publications, New
York, 1979. [Rob Krier is the designer of the town
of Kirchesteigseld in Potsdam, Germany. It is a major
contribution to the New Urbanism Movement and
very successful in terms of demand by East Germans
to live in a well-designed community].
Krier, Rob.
Architectural Composition. Rizzoli International Publications, New York, 1988.
Krier, Rob.
Rob Krier on Architecture. St. Martins Press, New
York, 1992.
71
Langdon, Philip.
A Better Place To Live: Reshaping the American Suburb, Harpe Perennial, 1995.
Le Corbusier.
The Radiant City. N.V. Drukkerij Kochen Knuttel.
Netherlands, 1967. First published in France in 1933.
[This classic book on modern architecture proposed
broad redesign of cities by Le Corbusier. It is a modern
classic.]
Leitmann, Josef.
Sustaining Cities: Environmental Planning and Management in Urban Design. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1999.
Lejeune, Jean-Francois (editor).
The New City, Vol. 3: Modern Cities, University of
Miami School of Architecture/Princeton Architectural
Press, 1994. [This volume includes an article by Andres
Duany, Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, and Gary Greenan on
Traditional Neighborhood concepts].
Longo, Gianni.
A Guide to Great American Public Places. Urban Initiatives, 1996.
Lopez-Barnett, Dianna with Browning, William D.
A Primer on Sustainable Building. Snowmass, CO:
Rocky Mountain Institute, 1995.
Luccarelli, Mark.
Lewis Mumford and the Ecological Region: Politics of
Planning. New York: The Guilford Press, 1995.
Lynch, Kevin.
Image of the City. The MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass.
1960. [This is the classic book that identified elements
of city composition.]
MacKaye, Benton.
The New Exploration: A Philosophy of Regional Planning. University of Illinois Press, 1994.
72
Mazria, Edward.
The Passive Solar Energy Book: A Complete Guide to
Passive Solar Home, Greenhouse, and Building Design.
Emmaus PA: Rodale Press, 1979.
McCamant, Kathryn and Durrett, Charles.
Cohousing: A Contemporary Approach to Housing
Ourselves. Ten Speed Press, 1994.
McHarg, Ian.
Design with Nature. New York: John Wiley & Sons,
1992.
McKenzie, Dorothy
Design for the Environment.Rizzoli, New York, NY
1991.
Metropolitan Dade County Planning Department.
The Road Corridor. Author: Gary Greenan, 1988.
[This is the first publication that addressed urban design problems in Miami-Dade County including specific
methods of implementing urban design principles. The
publication received the American Planning Association award of Excellence and is available from the Miami-Dade County Sustainabilty, Planning and Economic
Enhancement Department].
Miami-Dade County Park and Recreation Department.
Park Structure and Landscape Pattern Book, 2010.
Miami-Dade County Sustainabilty, Planning and Economic Enhancement Department.
The Traditional Neighborhood Development Ordinance, 1992. [This is the first TND ordinance adopted
in the country and sets forth in ordinance from the elements of Traditional Neighborhood Development].
Miami-Dade County.
Urban Design, Dade County. Coordinator: Gary
Greenan, 1995. [This report offers a brief analysis of
urban design in Miami-Dade County and is available
from the Miami-Dade County Sustainabilty, Planning
and Economic Enhancement Department.]
Sewell, John.
The Shape of the City: Toronto Struggles With Modern
Planning. University of Toronto Press, 1993.
Sim Van Der Ryn and Stuart Cowan.
Ecological Design, Island Press, Washington DC, 1996
Stein, Clarence.
Toward New Towns for America. Introduction by
Lewis Mumford Reinhold Publishing Corp., 1957. New
York, NY [This classic text provides urban design solutions such as the layout for Radburn New Jersey and
other evolving planning concepts of the 1950s-60s].
Sucher, David.
City Comforts. City Comforts Press, 1995.
Thomas, Randall; Fordham, Max. (Editors)
Environmental Design.
University of Miami School of Architecture 1991.
The New City. 1991 to current. [The New City publications focus on urbanism and are available from the
School of Architecture at the University of Miami].
Valle, Erick.
American Urban Typologies: Key West, Florida. Village
Publishers, 1995. [This publication analyzes the urban
development pattern for Key West, Florida. Key West
was an early model for the concepts of the New Urbanism and Traditional Neighborhood Development
concepts].
Western Australian Planning Commission Sustainable
Cities Initiative.
Livable Neighborhoods Community Design Code,
1997. [An excellent example of establishing community design criteria - available from Western Australian
Planning Commission, Albert Facey House, 469 Wellington Street, Perth, Western Australia 6000].
Wiley, John and Sons
Sun, Wind, and Light: Architectural Design Strategies.
New York, 1985
Wright, David.
Natural Solar Architecture: The Passive Solar Primer.
New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1984.
Unwin, Raymond.
Town Planning in Practice: An Introduction to the Art
of Designing Cities and Suburbs. Princeton Architectural Press, 1994. [This book first published in 1919
is the basis for the New Urbanism Movement. The
straight forward physical design solutions can easily be applied today and are the basis for many of the
concepts in this publication.]
U.S. Department of Interior National Park Service.
Guiding Principles of Sustainable Design. U.S. Government Printing, Pueblo, CO, 1993
Van Der Ryn, Sim and Calthorpe, Peter.
Sustainable Communities: A New Design Synthesis for
Cities, Suburbs, and Towns. Sierra Club Books, 1986.
73
Acknowledgements
Miami-Dade County Sustainability, Planning and Economic Enhancement
Jack Osterholt, Interim Director
Mark R. Woerner, AICP, Interim Assistant Director of Planning
Eric Silva, AICP, Interim Assistant Director of Zoning and Community Design
This manual was developed by the Community Design Division of Miami-Dade County
Sustainability, Planning and Economic Enhancement
Community Design Section
Shailendra Singh, Urban Design Center Supervisor
Gilbert Blanco, LEED AP, Area Planning Implementation Supervisor
Gianni Lodi, Planning Legislation Unit Supervisor
Alejandro Zizold, Principal Planner
Jess Linn, Principal Planner
Joshua Rak, Senior Planner
Catherine Prince, LEED AP, Senior Planner
Paola Jaramillo, Graphic Designer
Pablo Andrade, Planning Technician
Barbara Menendez, Planning Technician
Maria Guerrero, Administrative Secretary
Metropolitan Planning Section
Planning Research Section
Manuel Armada, Chief
Report Coordinators:
Alejandro Zizold, Principal Planner
Joshua Rak, Senior Planner
Gilbert Blanco, Area Planning Implementation Supervisor
Paola Jaramillo, Graphic Designer
Illustrations by:
Shailendra Singh, Jess Linn, Joshua Rak, Gilbert Blanco,
James Dougherty, Alissa Escobar, Seth Harry
Miami-Dade County Sustainability, Planning and Economic Enhancement wishes to acknowledge the
contribution of Professor Gary C. Greenan; the Dean and faculty of the University of Miami School
of Architecture.
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