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Eighteen - Pandemic-and Future-Proofing Cities: Pedestrian-oriented Development as an Alternative Model to Transit-based Intensification Centers
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 April 2023
Summary
Introduction
Many official smart growth-inspired Canadian plans limit sprawl by mixing land uses, transportation modes, jobs, and residents to create compact, transit-oriented, multi-functional intensification centers enriched with amenities and highly designed public spaces (Ontario Government Ministry of Municipal Affairs and Housing, 2019 [2006]; City of Toronto, 2018). However, these intensification strategies, built on new or expanded public transit systems at metropolitan, regional, and local planning scales, face challenges amid the 2020 pandemic (Filion et al, 2016).
Recovery from the combined COVID-19-induced loss of commercial activity in intensification centers and confidence in public transit could take years, and combined with an increased reliance on private vehicles, could undo decades of planning efforts at shifting unsustainable land use-transportation dynamics. Concurrently, there is growing attention on sustainable cities with ample public spaces where safe walking and cycling can flourish. Advocates call for reclaiming the streets for people, pedestrians, and cyclists as a resilient strategy for cities and healthy living (Ewing, 2020a). Cities like Milan, Paris, New York, and Seattle are making permanent, temporary space accommodations to pandemic-related pedestrian flows and distancing (Laker, 2020).
This chapter is based on the Canadian (and to a large extent North American) urban reality, which is dominated by lowdensity, functionally-specialized, and automobile-oriented land uses. Over the last decades, planning efforts to modify this urban form took the form of high-density intensification centers focused on existing or new public transit rail or BRT (bus rapid transit) systems. Such a strategy faces mounting uncertainty amid pandemic-induced, and possibly long-lasting, transit ridership, brick and mortar retailing, and office work decline. We propose as an alternative, or complementary, intensification approach, a pedestrian-oriented development (POD) model inspired by the ‘15-minute city’ being considered across the world. The chapter refers to transit-oriented developments and other attempts at concentrating density and multifunctionality as intensification centers. Different forms of intensification centers share as an objective the creation of spaces that contrast with the North American low-density car-dependent norm. One version of intensification centers discussed here is primarily transit-oriented while the other is more focused on a pedestrian-hospitable environment.
The impacts of COVID-19 on transit-based intensification centers
COVID-19 impacts multiple facets of intensification centers organized around transit and amplifies issues present prior to the pandemic.
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- Volume 3: Public Space and Mobility , pp. 187 - 198Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2021