A Letter-Grade System for Walkable Retail Buildings
What makes a building walkable? Or rather, what kind of buildings make a city walkable? David Barboza at Network blog Straight Outta Suburbia has been giving the matter some thought. He lays out his letter grade system for retail buildings in a recent post: An “A” building has to comply with the following rules: The building is placed … Continued
This Trader Joe’s gets a C because while it fronts the sidewalk, the entrance faces a parking lot in the rear.
What makes a building walkable? Or rather, what kind of buildings make a city walkable?
David Barboza at Network blog Straight Outta Suburbia has been giving the matter some thought. He lays out his letter grade system for retail buildings in a recent post:
This mixed-use retail building gets an A from Straight Outta Suburbia.
An “A” building has to comply with the following rules:
The building is placed along a street with a sidewalk and is set back from the front property line from zero to no more than five meters. If the building is on a corner lot with two or more frontages, it must be placed zero to five meters back from one corner.
The building has a usable entrance that faces the sidewalk.
Off-street parking, if present, is placed to the side, to the rear or beneath the building, but is not placed between the sidewalk and the building. Protected pedestrian walkways accessible to the disabled must be provided between the parking area and the sidewalk.
The building is at least two stories tall and the upper floor (or floors) contains another use, typically housing or office space.
Meanwhile, at the other end of the spectrum, here’s what gets an F from Barboza:
The building is set back more than 22 meters from the front property line along a street with a sidewalk and has parking or a drive-thru lane located between the sidewalk and the building entrances. On a corner lot, the building is set back at least 22 meters from either the front or a side property line.
The building contains retail, but no other land uses.
Alternatively, any shopping center along a street with no sidewalks receives an F.
What do you think about the ranking system — does it get the metrics right?
Elsewhere on the Network today: The Wash Cycle holds up a worthy candidate for worst sidewalk in northern Virginia. And Bike Portland reports that the city is caving to the state and removing one of its most in-demand bike lanes.
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This is the final post for Streetsblog Denver. The Denver Streets Partnership decided to end its operation of Streetsblog Denver as of January 31, 2022. Streetsblog USA assures us that all Streetsblog Denver content will remain online. To stay up to date on multimodal issues in Denver, please bookmark the Denver Streets Partnership blog — … Continued
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