Title of article
Design by the Rules: The Historical Underpinnings of Form-Based Codes
Author/Authors
Emily Talen AICP، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
17
From page
144
To page
160
Abstract
Problem: Form-based codes (FBCs) affect the design of cities with rules about building form and location. They are of renewed interest to modern planners, but their history and that of coding reform generally are largely unexplored.
Purpose: This research traces the historical lineage of FBCs.
Methods: This work is based on archival research on historic codes regulating urban development. I also used secondary sources on coding history, both from the United States and abroad.
Results and conclusions: I describe examples from a long history of rules governing building form and placement, considering those intended to produce particular effects on urban form as direct antecedents of modern FBCs.
Takeaway for practice: Todayʹs codes are more complex and difficult to implement than their predecessors. Modern FBCs require community participation and visioning to create consensus, whereas in previous historical periods such agreement was taken for granted and many aspects of urban form were dictated by technological and other constraints.
Research support: This article is one product of a larger research project on the history of urban codes. The research was funded in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Further information can be found at http://codesproject.asu.edu/
Journal title
Journal of the American Planning Association(JAPA)
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Journal of the American Planning Association(JAPA)
Record number
711804
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