Urban Architecture & Design, Construction & Building Trades, Construction & Building Trades, State & Local U.S. Government, Urban Studies, Real Estate & Property Law, Infrastructure Policies
The Small Town Planning Handbook
by Thomas L. Daniels, John W. Keller, Mark B. Lapping
This easy-to-use guide shows citizens, students, and government officials how to approach planning in a small town. Rather than restating the principles of urban planning, the authors offer insightful, practical advice specifically aimed at towns with limited resources and fewer than 10,000 residents.
The second edition covers the planning process from the assessment of community needs to the creation of zoning ordinances and capital improvement programs. It features expanded sections on plan implementation and economic development and includes a glossary of planning terms, an updated bibliography, and many more tables and graphs than the first edition.
Synopsis
Many small towns are experiencing profound social and economic change. Whether your town's issue is industrial decline or population growth, the second edition of The Small Town Planning Handbook offers useful advice on how to cope. The practical tools in this popular guide are sensitive to local character and the reality of limited financial and personnel resources. The authors update and substantially expand topics covered in the first edition. They explain how to develop a comprehensive town plan, draft and apply land-use regulations that put the plan into action, and create sustainable small towns. They also investigate new areas such as economic development, small town design, and strategic planning. A glossary of planning terms, a variety of illustrations, and easy-to-understand language make The Small Town Planning Handbook accessible to a wide range of readers from practicing planners and students to public officials and private citizens.