Category: Back of the Envelope

Get to Know the Awkwardly-Named “Terminated Vista”

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
I’ll admit it: I wish there was a more user-friendly way to say “terminated vista.” Perhaps I’m more sensitive to it because, as regular readers here know, I’m not an urban designer. I just work with them. That means I’m more inclined to scratch my head like any other layperson when I hear wonky expressions... Continue Reading
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Designing Regional Urban Retail Centers:  Lessons from the Mall and Beyond

Geoff Dyer
Geoff Dyer
As many of us are actively trying to reform car-focused retail into dynamic mixed-use, walkable urban centers, we are quick to point at the mall as the poster child for everything we are trying to reform. But as the heyday of last-century's drive-to mall fades into the past, there are many things that the mall excelled... Continue Reading
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Public Process: Don’t botch your online engagement

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
If you’re a city or town, it’s a fair bet you’ve long since accepted the internet. People meet, pay bills, go shopping, research causes and self-diagnose illness online, and they expect to engage government in similarly convenient ways. You’re fine with that. In turn, you’ve responded with all the things they’ve... Continue Reading
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The goal is not engagement. It’s disengagement.

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
What counts as a win in public engagement? It’s not uncommon for municipalities -- and consultants -- to “score” engagement as though it were a contest. The most points win. And you accumulate points by counting how many: How many notices issued and media employed. How many seats filled. How many ideas collected. Continue Reading
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B-Grid Be Good

Geoff Dyer
Geoff Dyer
The B-Grid: A traditional city building pattern common in early western settlements, particularly on the more rectilinear grid-iron pattern of streets. Typically, Main Street was the "A" street: a high quality, pedestrian-oriented space lined with continuous shopfronts and important civic buildings. But what about larger... Continue Reading
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