Now coveted: A Walkable, Convenient Place

“Now Coveted: A Walkable, Convenient Place”

“Demand for walkable urban space extends beyond city centers to suburbs; why is there an urbanization of the suburbs? Some baby boomers want to sell their large suburban houses and move to a walkable urban place but stay close to friends and family. Young families want the advantages of walkable urban life but also high-quality suburban schools.

Different infrastructure needs to be built, including rail transit and paths for walking and biking. Some research has shown that walkable urban infrastructure is substantially cheaper on a usable square foot basis than spread-out drivable suburban infrastructure; the infrastructure is used much more extensively in a small area, resulting in much lower costs per usable square foot.

It’s important that developers and their investors learn how to build places that integrate many different uses within walking distance. Building walkable urban places is more complex and riskier than following decades-long patterns of suburban construction. But the market gets what it wants, and the market signals are flashing pretty brightly: build more walkable, and bikable, places. “

Entire article (New York Times)

Posted in Bicycling, Planning, Walkability | Leave a comment

Oh goody, another “drive-thru”…

Well, it’s probably better than finding out that another business “went under” or left town:

Panera Bread Round Lake Beach Drive-Thru Now Open!

On Wednesday, November 9, the Panera Bread® Round Lake Beach bakery-café celebrated the opening of their new drive-thru. Round Lake Beach residents and village officials came together to celebrate the grand opening with a ribbon cutting ceremony. Panera Bread in Round Lake Beach is delighted to offer its customers a more convenient way to purchase their breakfast, lunch and dinner at the drive-thru.

Panera Bread Round Lake Beach Ribbon Ceremony:

Some of the notable attendees (pictured above) included Mayor Richard H. Hill, Chief of Police Gary Bitler, Greater Round Lake Fire Protection District Chief Paul Maplethorpe, Trustee Tom L. Smith’s and wife Marsha, Trustee Judy Armstrong, Trustee Sue Butler, Trustee Sylvia Valadez, Interim Public Works Director Gary Gramhofer, RLB Cultural and Civic Center Facility Manager Monica Marr, RLB Director of Inspection Services Margaret Sparr, John Wildenberg of the RLB Economic Development Department, and Megan – a Make-A-Wish Child. The Round Lake Beach bakery-café is proud to support the Make-A-Wish Foundation®, and raise money for wish children like Megan.

The Panera Bread Round Lake Beach bakery-café is located at 254 E Rollins Rd, and can be reached directly at (847) 270-9683. For more information on Panera Bread, visit http://www.panera-chicago.com

Ironically, Panera Bread provides some of the only local “place” in town. Visit during any evening and you’ll find the place packed with college students (“study-buddies”) working on projects, business-folk meeting clients or partners, Bible-study groups, new-mom support groups” and of course miscellaneous hungry people looking for a nice spot for some coffee and a snack, or a light dinner.

The “Community Room” is a major contribution to the civic life of the Round Lake Beach residents, as it is made available at no cost to whatever groups which to use it; the sign-up list shows at least 3-5 meetings per day. Thumbs-up to Panera for their civic-mindedness! (They also donate unsold goods at the end of the day to various food pantries.)

Why is Panera so popular with residents and business people looking for a place to meet? Well, what else have we got?

Anyway, back to the drive-thru aspect. It’s the first Panera with a drive-thru in Illinois. Good for them, and I’m legitimately glad business is good enough in this economy to support the expansion, and the obvious commitment of the owner(s) to stay in Round Lake Beach. I attend about one meeting per week there, and always make a purchase.

But the point of this post isn’t about the business, it’s about the Village’s response to the opening of the drive-thru (which itself is only an ADDITION to the already-existing business)! It is especially telling when compared to how pedestrian-unfriendly and bicycle-unfriendly the infrastructure is in connecting residential areas to commercial areas. Look at the picture above again… that’s the turn-out of Village officials you get for the ground-breaking of a new FACTORY. (Is it wrong to cheer even a small “victory” in tough economic times? No. Is the response maybe a little out-of-proportion?)

Still no bicycle rack (even though it is basically across the street from RLB’s own B&G Cyclery), and no real way for pedestrians to walk safely to the Panera from the original part of town south of Rollins Road, or from the Country Walk subdivision to the north. “Pedestrians not invited?”

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Sources: Sprawl Repair Manual

One of the pre-eminent experts in suburban redevelopment, Galina Tachieva is the author of the “Sprawl Repair Manual“:

We’ll be using it as one of our main references in the coming months because “Perception is Reality“!

One of the aspects of dealing with local government and agencies, non-profit organizations and community groups, and even motivated individuals, is that “sprawl” and its problems are by definition locked to LARGE communities and developments, that the related challenges couldn’t possibly be associated with small towns such as Round Lake Beach.

Until enough local people both 1) see the problems caused by our very own infrastructure AND 2) realize that we CAN do something about, our economic growth will continue to stagnate by being fixed in a minimal-return “single-use” model, and the people-potential will remain untapped.

Dis-function occurs when modern (vice centuries-old traditional and time-tested) building methodologies are used EVERYTIME and  EVERYWHERE they are used, and at any scale. Galina sums it up succinctly in this write-up:

“Sprawl” is an outdated and dysfunctional form of development. Its gargantuan problems have been pointed out over the past few decades, but the recent economic and real estate calamities — with shopping centers, office parks, and entire subdivisions failing daily — have proven the urgent need to address these problems. The responsible and sustainable way to deal with sprawl is neither to abandon it nor to continue building in the same pattern but to repair, reorganize, and reuse as much of it as possible in complete, livable, robust communities.

Sprawl is inflexible in its physical form and will not naturally mature into walkable environments. Without precise interventions, sprawl might morph somewhat but it is unlikely to produce diverse, sustainable urbanism. It is imperative that we repair sprawl consciously and methodically through design, policy, and incentives.

Sprawl repair transforms failing or potentially failing single-use and car-dominated developments into complete communities that have better economic, social, and environmental performance.

The objective of the sprawl repair strategy is to build communities based on the neighborhood unit, similar to the traditional fabric that was established in cities and suburbs prior to World War II.

The primary tactic of sprawl repair is to insert needed elements — buildings, density, public space, additional connections — to complete and diversify the mono-cultural agglomerations of sprawl: residential subdivisions, strip shopping centers, office parks, suburban campuses, malls, and edge cities.

By systematically modifying the reparable areas (turning subdivisions into walkable neighborhoods and shopping centers and malls into town centers) and leaving to devolution those that are irreparable (abandonment or conversion to park, agricultural, or natural land), portions of sprawl can be reorganized into complete communities.

MORE…

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The Tragedy of Suburbia…

… can be felt in small-town America. Just sit on a bench in downtown Round Lake Beach for a half-hour some evening… sit and watch.

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James Howard Kunstler calls suburban sprawl “the greatest misallocation of resources the world has ever known.” His arguments and examples make very clear the link between “places and spaces” with civic and cultural vitality.

This presentation by Mr. Kunstler is a great overview of the issues at the heart of this blog. The problems he describes are not just “out there”… on the East Coast, or California, or some decaying rust-belt city. Many of them are right here in Lake County IL and our own towns and villages.

We can deal with at least some of these challenges (and not all the fixes involve millions of $$$ of “urban renewal”), but first we must  actually understand the enormous economic and social impact these challenges present.

Posted in Planning, Transit, Walkability | Leave a comment

Let’s start with a walk…

So much I could say about “walking”, but none of it said as well as this gentleman. Now, what to do about walkability issues in Round Lake Beach… THAT we’ll have PLENTY to talk about!

Walking and walkable neighborhoods in-and-of themselves won’t overcome the built-in infrastructure bias in favor of cars, but after you watch this video you may appreciate the idea of walking a bit more and looks for ways to make it do-able (less dangerous) in our village!

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