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“Pavement Audit” for Greenville and Pickens Counties Diagnosis Report to Focus Group January 25, 2006
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Presentation Overview Lawrence Group Scope of Audit Audit Methodology Recommendations/Findings Questions/Feedback/Next Steps
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The Lawrence Group Founded in St. Louis in 1983 Carolinas office in Davidson, NC Town Planning & Architecture Municipal, non- profit, and developer clients
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Lawrence Group Projects
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Mooresville, NC Code
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Haynie-Sirrine Master Plan – Greenville, SC
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General Development Guidelines – Research Triangle, NC
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Active Living Assessment
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Concord-Roberta Church Small Area Plan - Concord, NC
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Woodlands- Davidson, NC
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Belmont Reserve- Belmont, NC
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Project Scope
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Saluda-Reedy Watershed “...non-point source pollution – sediment, nutrients and waste carried by storm water – is now the chief threat to these rivers... It will take a concerted effort by community leaders across the Upstate to effectively address the threats of non-point source pollution fed by rapid development...” -SRWC
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Project Scope “... audit of paving requirements in the codes and ordinances of Greenville and Pickens Counties...” “Identify opportunities...to reduce the amount of impervious cover generated by new development.”
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Project Scope
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Ordinances Reviewed Greenville County –City of Greenville – Greenville LUDO –Fountain Inn – Greer – Mauldin – Simpsonville – Travelers Rest Pickens County – Central – Clemson – Easley – Liberty – (Pickens)
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Methodology Zoning Ordinances and Land Development Regulations Based on “Builders for the Bay” process (www.cwp.org) 10 major categories; 36 factors
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Methodology Major Categories –Street width –Right-of-way width –Cul-de-sac design –Street drainage (swales v. curb & gutter) –Parking ratios –Shared parking –Parking lot design –Parking lot landscaping –Sidewalks and planting strips –Driveways
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Imperviousness Rooftops + Car space
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Transport-related impervious cover: 60-70% (streets + parking areas) Roof tops: 30-40% Imperviousness
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Street Design
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Local Streets: 20-24 feet Could be as narrow as 16-18 ft Street Width
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Minimum street widths Street Width
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Local Streets: 20-24 feet Cul-de-Sac streets: 22-28 ft –Could be as narrow as 18 ft Manufactured home park streets: 20-28 ft –Should be same as local streets Alleys: 12-30 feet (Greenville County standard is good: 12-18 ft)
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Street Width Local Streets: 20-24 ft Cul-de-Sac streets: 22-28 ft Manufactured home park streets: 20-28 ft Alleys: 12-30 ft (Greenville County standard is perfect) Collector Streets: 24-40 ft –Could be as narrow as 20 ft –Consider parking, bike lanes, turn lanes
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Curb Radii 25-40 ft (Greenville County) Pickens Co: Not specified AASHTO Guidelines: –Local/local: 10-15 ft –Local/collector: 15-20 ft –Collector/collector: 15-25 ft
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Right-of-Way Width 40-50 ft; typically 50 ft Could be as narrow as 34-38 ft. Allow utilities in the street
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Cul-de-sac Design Typical: 40 ft (Greenville: 41 ft; Clemson: 35 ft) Landscaped Islands: 8 of 13 allow Alternate turn-arounds: – Greenville: yes – Pickens: no
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Cul-de-sac Design Cul-de-sac islands: –Greenville Co.: typically yes –Pickens Co: typically no
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Open Channels/Swales Only Clemson, Easely, Liberty require curb & gutter on all streets Pickens County swales: < 2 dua; slopes “not excessive” Tom Schueler: –No slopes > 5% –Runoff velocities > 4-5 ft/sec. –Soils/climate don’t allow dense turf –Water table < 1 ft below channel –No densities > 3 dua
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Sidewalks Context-sensitive requirements –Based on street-type (Clemson) –Development density (> 2 dua) –Proximity to schools (1-1.5 miles) One side only generally Alternate networks: 4/13 codes
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Sidewalks Street-type based (Clemson): Density-based (FHWA): Street-type# of unitsSidewalk Cul-de-sac25 SF/43 MFOne side Access25 SF/43 MFOne side Sub-collector62Both sides Collector125 +Both sides Commercial areas: Both sides > 4 dua:Both sides 1-4 dua:One side < 1 dua:None
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Sidewalks Sidewalk width: typically 4 ft min ITE & FHWA: 5 ft min.
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Planting Strips & Trees 5/13 codes require planting strip 2-3 ft wide –6-8 ft recommended for street trees No codes require street trees Benefits of trees –Reduce runoff volumes –Increase soil infiltration –Increase soil water storage –Reduce erosion –Shade prolongs life of asphalt; reduces runoff temperatures –Shade: cars, pedestrians, homes –Improve air quality –Aesthetics (= increased property values)
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Planting Strips & Trees
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Parking Areas
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Parking Ratios Wide variation in requirements Not based on reliable research Shopping Centers –2-6 spaces/1000 sf in Greenville Co. –4-5 spaces/1000 sf in Pickens Co. –10 spaces/1000 sf for food stores in Central, Easley, Liberty –ICSC: 4/1000 yields surplus 99% of time Parking requirements waived in most CBD’s
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Parking Ratios Recommendations to consider: Use draft Greenville LUDO model –Low minimums (2/1000 sf for retail) –Maximums (use current minimums) Allow on-street parking to count Waive/reduce parking req’mts in all CBD’s and other mixed- use nodes Reduced minimums for transit service
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Shared Parking All codes allow except Clemson No incentives for sharing 50 or 100% of spaces may be shared “each parking space may be counted for each activity” (Central, Easley, Liberty) Greenville LUDO offers more complex/accurate formula
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Parking Lot Design Stall width: 8.5-9 ft 2 rows & aisle: 60-64 ft –60 ft is adequate Compact spaces: 3/13 codes –Limited benefit Pervious Pavement (good!): –Wide variation: not allowed; allowed; required –Pickens Co.: allowed but not req’d –Greenville Co.: req’d for 100-200% over minimum
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Parking Lot Design
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Parking Lot Landscaping Greenville Co.: All but Fountain Inn Pickens Co.: Clemson, Easley Range of applicability: –1-60+ spaces; new and/or expanded –Clemson, Greenville Co. extremes Required planting: –Greenville Co.: ~ 1 tree/10-20 spaces –Pickens Co.: 5-10% of area No required curbing: Good! No biorention encouraged/required
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Parking Lot Landscaping Bio-rentention
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Parking Lot Landscaping Bio-rentention: Wilmington, NC
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Driveways Clemson & Mauldin allow permeable driveways (all other codes silent) Residential Setbacks: 15-40 ft; generally 20+ –Reduce front setbacks to 20 ft or less
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Other Issues Minimum lot size –Consider minimum density instead –Provide incentives for clustering Encourage Alleys in higher density SF (8+ dua) LEED-ND (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Land use policies –Greater density = less impact Transportation Demand Management
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Next Steps Questions/Discussion
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