An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. The Concepts of Assessment
3.1. Utopian Vision
3.2. Equity
3.3. Uncertainty Management
3.4. Natural Capital
3.5. Integrative Approach
3.6. Ecological Energy
3.7. Ecological Economics
3.8. Eco-Form
- Compactness refers to urban contiguity and connectivity and suggests that future urban development should take place adjacent to existing urban structures [39].
- Mixed Land Uses indicates the diversity of functional land uses, such as residential, commercial, industrial, institutional, and transportation. This encourages walking and cycling and reduces the need for car travel, as jobs, shops, and leisure facilities are located in close proximity of one another [44,45,46,47].
- Diversity is “a multidimensional phenomenon” that promotes other desirable urban features, including a larger variety of housing types, building densities, household sizes, ages, cultures, and incomes [48] (p. 320). Diversity is vital for cities. Without it, the urban system declines as a living place [49] and the resulting homogeneity of built forms, which often produces unattractive monotonous urban landscapes, leads to increased segregation, car travel, congestion, and air pollution [39].
- Passive Solar Design aims to reduce energy demands and to provide the best use of passive energy through specific planning and design measures, such as orientation, layout, landscaping, building design, urban materials, surface finish, vegetation, and bodies of water. This facilitates optimum use of solar gain and microclimatic conditions and reduces the need for the heating and cooling of buildings by means of conventional energy sources [50,51], [52] (p. 43).
- Renewal and Utilization refers to the process of reclaiming the many sites that are no longer appropriate for their original intended use and can be reclaimed for a new purpose, such as brownfields. Cleaning, rezoning, and developing contaminated sites are key aspects of revitalizing cities and neighborhoods and contribute to their sustainability and to a healthier urban environment.
- Planning Scale influences and is influenced by climate change. For this reason, desirable planning scale should be considered and integrated in plans for regional, municipal, district, neighborhood, street, site, and building levels. Planning that moves from macro to micro levels has a more holistic and positive impact on climate change.
4. Assessing PlaNYC2030
4.1. Uncertainty Management and Adaptation in PlaNYC
4.2. The Utopian Vision of PlaNYC
“It is a vision of providing New Yorkers with the cleanest air of any big city in the nation; of maintaining the purity of our drinking water;…; of producing more energy more cleanly and more reliably, and offering more choices on how to travel quickly and efficiently across our city. It is a vision where contaminated land is reclaimed and restored to communities; where every family lives near a park or playground; where housing is sustainable and available to New Yorkers from every background, reflecting the diversity that has defined our city for centuries”.[4] (p. 141)
4.3. PlaNYC and the Concept of Equity-Public Participation
“We cannot simply create as much capacity as possible; we must carefully consider the kind of city we want to become. We must ask which neighborhoods would suffer from the additional density and which ones would mature with an infusion of people, jobs, stores and transit. We must weigh the consequences of carbon emissions, air quality, and energy efficiency when we decide the patterns that will shape our city over the coming decades”.[4] (p. 18)
“Over the past three months, we have received thousands of ideas sent by email through our website; we’ve heard from over a thousand citizens, community leaders and advocates who came to our meetings to express their opinions; we have met with over 100 advocates and community organizations, held 11 Town Hall meetings, and delivered presentations around the city. The input we received suggested new ideas for consideration, shaped our thinking, reordered our priorities”.[4] (p. 9)
“…still invisible in the 2030 plan, barely mentioned in the scores of spreadsheets, maps and colorful images that herald the coming of the green city. They can post comments but play no role in setting priorities or initiating change. They are not consulted until after the fact, yet they are often criticized for only reacting. Civic and advocacy groups, including many that started fighting for a greener and greater future decades ago, and advocated sustainability long before the term was uttered in City Hall, are similarly sidelined”.
4.4. PlaNYC and Natural Capital
- (1)
- (2)
- Water: The Plan calls for “developing critical backup systems for our aging water network to ensure long-term reliability” [4] (p. 12). It also proposes ways to maximize urban water absorption when planting trees [4] (p. 59). Finally, it suggests creating vegetated ditches (swales) along parkways to store direct rainfall and facilitate the natural cleansing of runoff [4] (p. 60).
- (3)
- Waterfronts and Waterways: New York City has 578 miles of waterfront, which the Plan regards as “one of the city’s greatest opportunities for residential development,” and an important site of other types of projects as well [4] (p. 22). PlaNYC also confronts the “legacy of the City’s industrial past…” “…which treated New York’s waterways as a delivery system” [4] (p. 51), and proposes to open 90% of the City’s waterways to recreation by preserving natural areas and reducing pollution [4] (p. 53).
- (4)
- Trees: “The City will expand efforts to reforest approximately 2000 acres of parkland by 2017,” and reforestation will be implemented in many locations around the city [4] (p. 128).
- (5)
- Land: Since the City’s land supply remains fixed, PlaNYC calls for using “our existing stock of land more efficiently” and recapturing almost all vacant, unutilized and under-used land for development.
4.5. Eco-Form in PlaNYC
Design Concepts (Criteria) | New York Plan |
---|---|
Density | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Diversity | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Mixed Land Use | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Compactness | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Sustainable Transportation | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Passive Solar Design | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Greening | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Renewal and Utilization | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Planning Scale | 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. High |
Total Score |
4.6. The Integrative Approach of PlaNYC
4.7. PlaNYC and Ecological Energy
4.8. Ecological Economics in PlaNYC
5. Conclusions and Planning Recommendations
- (1)
- Like other cities around the world, New York’s human, ecological, economic, and urban structures and spaces are at risk and face an increasing level of uncertainty due to the shifting parameters of climate change. In light of these uncertainties, there is a need to rethink and revise the concepts, procedures, and scope of conventional approaches to planning. In order to meet the challenges posed by climate change, planning is in need of a more coordinated, holistic, and multidisciplinary approach, as planning in the context of such great uncertainty is unprecedented in our modern history.
- (2)
- Using the proposed conceptual framework to evaluate New York City’s PlaNYC 2030 provides an informative, easy to grasp, effective, and constructive means of illuminating the Plan’s strengths and weaknesses.
- (3)
- The assessment reveals some of the merits of PlaNYC. It proposes effective measures for planning the physical dimensions of the city. In terms of eco-form, it promotes greater compactness and density, enhanced mixed land use, sustainable transportation, greening, and renewal and utilization. With regard to the concept of uncertainty, it addresses future uncertainties related to climate change with institutional measures, and enhances the urban adaptive planning capacity of the city. PlaNYC recommends efficient ways of using the city’s natural capital assets and pays special attention to strategies for providing New York with cleaner and more reliable power. From the perspective of ecological economics, the Plan creates a number of mechanisms to promote its climate change goals and to create a cleaner environment for economic investment. Finally, PlaNYC offers an ambitious vision of reducing emissions by 30% and creating a “greener, greater New York,” and links this vision with the international discourse and agenda on climate change and sustainability (see [2]).
- (4)
- According to the assessment, PlaNYC has three major shortcomings. The first is its failure to adequately address the social planning issues that are crucial to New York City, the most diverse city in the world (see [2]). PlaNYC does not effectively address issues of equity, such as social justice, diversity, race, and economic segregation. It also fails to address the issues facing vulnerable communities due to climate change. New York City is “socially differentiated” in terms of the capacity of communities to meet climate change uncertainties, physical and economic impacts, and environmental hazards.
- (5)
- The second shortcoming of PlaNYC relates to the plan’s adaptation strategy, which focuses on emissions reduction alone and fails to prepare the city and its physical infrastructure for potential disasters caused by climate change shifting. Unfortunately, PlaNYC did not make a sufficiently radical shift toward planning for climate change and adaptation. This being the case, it seems clear that the authors of PlaNYC have not taken the lessons of Hurricane Katrina as seriously as they should have done.
- (6)
- The Plan’s third shortcoming is that although PlaNYC calls for an integrative approach to climate change on the institutional level, it fails to effectively integrate civil society, communities, and grassroots organizations into the process. The lack of a systematic procedure for public participation throughout the city’s neighborhoods and among different social groupings and other stakeholders is a critical shortcoming, particularly during the current age of climate change uncertainty (see [2]).
- (7)
- Another important lesson we can learn from applying the proposed evaluation framework to PlaNYC is that when planning for climate change, planners must not overlook any one of the eight concepts of assessment. The framework is not a mere collection of unrelated concepts. Rather, they are interconnected, with each concept playing a specific role in the evaluation and influencing the others. Based on the measures advanced in PlaNYC, New York City could certainly be “greener,” but in order to truly be “greater,” planners must better incorporate its main treasures-socio-cultural diversity and the people of the city–into the planning process and into the Plan.
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Jabareen, Y. An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030. Sustainability 2014, 6, 5898-5919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6095898
Jabareen Y. An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030. Sustainability. 2014; 6(9):5898-5919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6095898
Chicago/Turabian StyleJabareen, Yosef. 2014. "An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030" Sustainability 6, no. 9: 5898-5919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6095898
APA StyleJabareen, Y. (2014). An Assessment Framework for Cities Coping with Climate Change: The Case of New York City and its PlaNYC 2030. Sustainability, 6(9), 5898-5919. https://doi.org/10.3390/su6095898