View Full Version : Citizens Can Help Plan Lay Of Land


Quegiebo
February 15th, 2007, 08:14 AM
Citizens Can Help Plan Lay Of Land

By KAREN BRANCH-BRIOSO The Tampa Tribune :okay:

http://media.tbo.com/photos/trib/2007/feb/0215rll2.jpg
Each group must find spaces on its map for 1,102 yellow Legos
and 436 red ones. Even with toys involved, the game's not
easy to play, as a group of locals found when they staged a
dry run this week at the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council

Published: Feb 15, 2007

PINELLAS PARK - Fed up with pell-mell development and traffic jams creeping into your once idyllic neighborhood?

You may have an opportunity to have a say in growth - for the long term.

The region is only going to grow more. Way more. So Reality Check Tampa Bay, spearheaded by the Urban Land Institute and Tampa Bay Partnership, is seeking volunteers for a May 18 exercise to figure out where best to locate homes for the 3.4 million more people expected to be here by 2050 - and workplaces for nearly 1.7 million new jobs.

"We've had lots of interest from elected officials and businesspeople," said Betty Carlin, spokeswoman for the Tampa Bay Partnership, which works to lure jobs to the area. "We're kind of light on the nonprofit folks, the everyday citizen types."

Reality Check Tampa Bay's project manager, Amy Maguire, said there's a particular shortage of people focused on the environment and people "in their 20s and 30s, people who want to live here and raise their families here."

The plan is to invite 300 people to the Tampa Convention Center: 100 each from the public, private and the nonprofit, civic-oriented sectors. Divide them into groups of 10. Give them a map of the seven-county region - Hernando, Hillsborough, Manatee, Pasco, Pinellas, Polk and Sarasota - and leave out county borders to force groups to think regionally.

Then find the best spots to put all those new places to live and work.

For the purposes of Reality Check Tampa Bay - an exercise the Urban Land Institute has conducted in Los Angeles, Washington, north Texas and Maryland - that means each group must find spaces on its map for 1,102 yellow Legos and 436 red ones.

Even with toys involved, the game's not easy to play, as a group of locals found when they staged a dry run this week at the Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council. A little more than a half-hour into the exercise, developer Harry Lerner sounded an alarm as one colleague contemplated piling up Legos near a particularly green part of the map.

"He wants to put a city right next to the Green Swamp!" said Lerner, president of Maxcy Development Group and an executive committee member of Reality Check Tampa Bay.

The same group initially lined up tall stacks of red and yellow Legos up and down the coastline. Then Maguire gently reminded the stackers that they had listed "minimize impact to environment" as one of their guiding principles and suggested hurricane evacuation of all those new coastal residents and workers could be a problem.

By the end of the exercise, the group shortened the tall coastline stacks considerably. But those Legos had to go somewhere. The group ended up creating a new city in Manatee County where Interstate 275 meets Interstate 75, and a new highway the group threw in for good measure stretched from there to the east coast of Florida.

That's one thing Reality Check Tampa Bay will have that the other cities' volunteers didn't. They get ribbons to show their hopes for mass transit and new roads - as well as the Legos.

The traffic-conscious Tampa Bay groups placed those ribbons first for the dry run.

For those who want to participate in the real thing come May, Reality Check Tampa Bay will accept nominations through March 15. The group's executive committee and co-chairpeople will make the final cut. Those who don't make it for the Lego-building stage may get a call later, Maguire said.

"A lot of it is after May 18th: how to build more communication with these people," Maguire said. "That can be translated into some scenarios where we can go out to the people who expressed interest and say, 'Here are some scenarios that came out of this event.' May 18th is just the snowball. We want to go back to these individuals that provide input or interest to add snow so that it keeps gaining more momentum."

Reporter Karen Branch-Brioso can be reached at kbranch-brioso@tampatrib .com or (813) 259-7815.

http://www.tbo.com/news/metro/MGBKSFEL6YE.html

tampamobster21
February 15th, 2007, 08:21 AM
This is kind of cool. At least they are trying to map out the projected future even if it is 40 years away.

brickell
February 15th, 2007, 11:08 PM
Interesting concept. A nice way to show that density is the anti-sprawl.

Tampa610
February 15th, 2007, 11:28 PM
The Hillsborough County Planning Commission is about to start something similar this year which will focus on a 50 year plan for the county vs. the current 20 year plan.

Jasonhouse
February 16th, 2007, 05:37 AM
Very cool... I wonder if a shlep like me could get in on that? Probably not.

tampamobster21
February 16th, 2007, 08:05 AM
Well you would have to get an invite.

I-275westcoastfl
February 16th, 2007, 08:40 PM
i read about this in the times a few days ago thats pretty cool i think they should instead have a contest for planning of the future bay area and have people submit that.

AKBTampa
February 20th, 2007, 08:07 AM
Can't a bunch of us just nominate Jason? I mean he does already have his name in print. The article and website say that they are accepting nominations until March 15, 2007. Hell, Jason you can even nominate yourself as well!

http://www.tampabay.org/documents/Nomination%20Form.pdf

After going back on your comments in the ybor threadn (as well as most of your posts in general), I'd be glad to see your input heard.