Urban Planning Final Exam
A building that uses no more energy than it produces is known as a
A net zero building
Commercial or industrial properties that are often idle, abandoned or underused properties in urban areas and have some degree of environmental contamination are often referred to as ___________________ sites.
Brownfield
A key feature of the Bus Rapid Transit system, so successful in Curitiba, Brazil, is:
Bus only, grade separated right of way
The primary action-forcing device for implementing federal environmental regulations is through a/an ____________________.
EIS
The "urbanized" suburbs have long ceased to be an appendage to the central city - they are a new type of satellite city developed at the periphery of central cites and characterized by 5,000,000 sf of office space, 600,000 sf of retail space, more jobs than bedrooms, perceived as one place and was nothing like a city 30 years ago. These new decentralized cities are often called _________________:
Edge City
The overall goals of sustainable development planning are:
Environmental quality, social equity, and economic development
Growth management is more often used in older central cities than it is in suburban areas.
False
Planning in the US is characterized by centralized control while planning in Europe has historically been characterized by local control.
False
Public transportation usage in the U.S. peaked in the 1970s.
False
The USGBC has established a program to set standards for green buildings under which points are awarded for various green building features. This program is generally referred to as:
LEED
Because good urban design is an elusive quality, accepted design control as administered by community design review boards is based on the rule of:
No Excessive Difference
In planning for metropolitan regions, state governments often set up public authorities to handle a particular cross-jurisdiction issue. The first public authority in the US that was started in 1921 was the ___________________________________
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
By the 1990's, the planning approach that sought to control urban sprawl was known as:
Smart Growth
One method of reducing the commuter load on roads is to modify traditional zoning practices to allow higher density, mixed-use developments at mass transportation stations. This planning concept, championed by Peter Calthorpe among others, is often referred to as ______________.
TOD
In 1862, the federal government passed ________________, which permitted settlers to claim 160-acre lots in the west if they resided on the land for at least 5 years.
The Homestead Act
The key reason that makes metropolitan regional planning difficult is:
The political problem of cross municipal boundary conflicts
Key areas of regional planning concern include:
Transportation issues Water and sewage issues Air quality issues
Bus rapid transit (BRT) is distinguished from traditional bus systems because they operate on their own right-of-way, have longer spaces between stops, and board from a raised platform.
True
Federal legislation and favorable tax policies have encouraged home ownership since the 1930s. These policies have contributed to suburbanization.
True
Greenbelts and new towns are the most distinctive features of British planning after the Second World War.
True
Growth Management is generally defined as the regulation of the amount, timing, location and character of development.
True
In the United States, the federal style of planning has been mostly to permit and encourage, rather than command.
True
One of the requirements for communities to receive community development block grants is to create and follow a Housing Assistance Plan (HAP).
True
The "Built Environment" refers to any environment that is man-made and provides a structure for human activity:
True
The Supreme Court approved the taking of property from one private owner and ultimately transferring it to another private owner in the 1954 Berman v Parker case.
True
The expansion of railroads in the east and the creation of the transcontinental railroad was funded primarily by federal land grants to rail companies.
True
There has been a shift in transportation planning and management over the last few decades from merely building more infrastructure towards optimizing the performance of the existing system.
True
Urban Renewal intended to be a housing program; replacing bad, old housing with good, new housing.
True
Battery Park City in New York City is an excellent example of:
Urban Design
We reviewed several innovations in transportation management in both the textbook presentation and the Chaddick presentation. Among these innovations are all of the following except:
adding more parking garages
One of the earliest economic development projects in the U.S. was
constructing the Erie Canal which connected the Hudson River to Lake Erie
The Community Development Act of 1974 did all of the following, except:
continued the Urban Renewal program, but with a new name
The flow of federal money for highways, urban redevelopment, and environmental projects increased in the 1960s, but in order to get federal funds, local governments were required to meet federal requirements for regional planning. This federal funding was a factor in bringing about this newer approach to planning:
council of governments
It is hard to identify today the impact of that driverless cars will have on urban planning at this point. But it does appear that they will do all of these, except:
decrease the number of drivers on the road
Communist cities are often characterized by:
dense and compact development abundance of parks and public spaces highly developed public transportation system
Urban Renewal began with the Housing Act of 1949 and had the following goals:
eliminating substandard housing revitalizing city economies reducing de facto segregation
One growth management tool is to require a payment by a developer in return for permitting the development. These are typically used to cover infrastructure costs of new development and are called a/an:
exaction
It is not unusual to find that traffic congestion does not decline after a major project is completed, even though the capacity has increased. This is because the project has spurred more drivers to use the road. While the drive-time may not have changed, more people are taking advantage of the highway. This phenomenon is referred to as:
induced demand
When comparing how transportation is paid for, the following statement is accurate:
private transportation is largely self-financed and public transportation is federally subsidized
The interstate highway system had many results, some unintended. These include:
rapid, safe, high quality transportation between cities and from city to suburb an acceleration of the shift of manufacturing freight from rail-borne to truck-borne the growth of "edge cities" because of the beltway design
Local communities get involved in economic development in the following ways:
reduced property taxes and taxing districts marketing and promoting the community creating industrial parks and incubator buildings using land-use controls (zoning) and providing infrastructure (road and utilities)
One of the main ways to finance an authority such as the Port Authority of New York and New is from _____________. Funds raised are used to pay for projects and then revenue from tolls are used to pay down the debt.
tax-exempt bonds
Dutch planning at the national level is exemplified by _____________, the urban heart of Holland.
the Ranstad Holland
One of France's most pressing planning problems has to do with
the banlieues, or immigrant ghettos
There were unintended consequences of Urban Renewal. These include the following:
the poor could not afford the newer, better housing it required the forced moving of families and businesses it destroyed cheap "incubator" space that attracts new enterprises