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Published byCharles Holmes Modified over 9 years ago
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CREATING Transit-oriented Communities
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“Catastrophic climate change – far worse than anything we have experienced – will be unavoidable if we don’t prevent a massive “lock-in” of emissions from new coal-fired power plants, long-lived industrial infrastructure, inefficient buildings, car- centric cities, and irreversible deforestation. The First Rule of Holes: when you’re in one, stop digging.” - Design to Win, A report commissioned by the Energy Foundation
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Where We Need to Be By 2035: about 40% below 1990 emissions (HB 2815) That’s about 60% below today’s level Today’s vehicles, at 20 mpg average, produce about a pound of CO2e per mile If 2035 vehicles average 50 mpg (equivalent), they will produce 0.4 lb of CO2e per mile, yielding a 60 percent reduction in emissions... if there is no growth in VMT between now and 2035, as the region adds 1.5 million people.
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Creating Transit-Oriented Communities
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Add climate change to transportation planning Add climate change to land use planning Require TOD at high-capacity transit station areas Maximize infrastructure investments Key components of conservation include:
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Key components of housing affordability include : Require a percentage of new housing in TOD areas be affordable to low-income people. Development incentives like fast-track permitting, reduction of parking requirements Creating long-term affordable housing opportunities
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Capitalize on taxpayer investment Global warming and VMT reductions Affordable communities Healthier families Combats volatile gas prices Protect working farms and forests. Puget Sound restoration Why Transit-Oriented Communities?
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CREATING Transit-oriented Communities
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