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BIRTH OF THE MIAMI 21 CODE - A PROGRESSIVE FORM-BASED CODE

After a four-year gestation involving over 500 meetings of careful consideration and long deliberations a new zoning code to be known as the "MIAMI 21 CODE" has finally been born. MIAMI 21 represents the new holistic approach to land use and urban planning taking root in a major Florida metropolis. Says Alexander Adams of the City's Urban Design Section "In a time when many legislators and localities are looking to relax rules for growth and environment, through MIAMI 21 we are attempting to strengthen the urban design, include Transit Oriented Design incentives, revise the bonus structure for many key community building needs including affordable housing, brownfield redevelopment, parks and open spaces enhancement, historic preservation and transfer of development rights, as well as, factoring in energy conservation through LEED certification.

"Miami is a dense unique locality that is fully built out and will depend on redevelopment of the urban areas to enhance the built form. As a form based code, MIAMI 21 places primary emphasis on the physical form of the built environment with the end goal of producing a specific type of place. It is a community planning and design option that many Florida communities may want to carefully watch and consider incorporating wholesale, or in part, as a means to counter the built-in sprawl producing effects of conventional zoning regulations.

"The principles, which underpin Miami 21, stand in contrast to the car-is-king, suburban template of parking lots, blank walls, exposed garages, obtrusive driveways and set-back, isolated buildings that under the current code had long dominated -- and deadened -- city streets" (Adapted from "Can Miami 21 Plan Replicate Biscayne Boulevard's Revival?" by Andres Viglucci of the Miami Herald). In addition, as a form-based approach, careful attention is given to community design, density/intensity and land use mix transitions along geographic transects or slices.

Transect Zones, Thoroughfares, Buildings and Landscapes
As a "form-based code", Miami 21 lays out the community's desired form of development as components of particular transect zones, thoroughfares, buildings and landscapes. The Code prescribes development form requirements in these areas to achieve the desired community vision. It provides building-form prescriptions of what a community wants to be rather than a set of rules prohibiting what cannot be built. The urban context is considered within the Miami 21Code and is comprised of a series of components - neighborhoods, corridors, urban centers, and districts - each with its own arrangement within transect zones. In all cases, the goal of transit-oriented, pedestrian-friendly, mixed-use urbanism guides the arrangement of transect zones, thoroughfares, buildings and landscape.

Transects & Zones
Miami 21, and other form-based approaches, encourage development pattern progression based on the organizational principles of transects. A transect is defined as a geographical cross-section that reveals a sequence of zones or system of ordering habitats based on the physical character of a built place and managed environments. Each transect is managed based on the building's configuration, setting, relation to the street, uses, heights, floor ratio, density, and transitions between successional zones. The elements within each zone are calibrated by their location on the transect scale from the most natural to the urban downtown. For example, the Miami 21 transect zones are: Natural (T1), Sub-Urban (T3), Urban General (T4), Urban Center (T5), and Urban Core (T6) with several maximum heights. Other specially defined zones were created to blend the existing zoning of Miami including Civic Space (CS), Civic Institutional (CI), Civic Institution - Health District (CI-HD), Light Industrial/Work Place (D1), Industrial (D2) and Waterfront Industrial (D3).


Pragmatically, for each transect zone the allowable uses, density, intensity, parking, building frontages and setback standards are displayed using a series of matrixed tables and graphical depictions in addition to the normal zoning text to describe intended outcomes. Through application of transects and zones the mix or variety of allowed uses are regulated less by the traditional segregation of land uses and more so in terms of allowable buildings, building heights and densities. This is a move away from the modular one-dimensional, segregated land use approach of conventional zoning and much more permissive of mixing allowable uses. To preserve the character and tranquility of existing neighborhoods a series of established setback areas, neighborhood conservation, and historic districts were carried over from the existing zoning code. Successional zoning only allows adjacent zoning changes to the next more intense transect category respecting or requiring appropriate transitions across abutting transect zones.

Emphasis on Public/ Private Spaces Interaction - A Major Component of Public Open Space
Within the Miami 21 form-based code, urban form is characterized by a set of interdependent elements that create a sense of place. These include thoroughfare type, building type, frontage type, and the arrangement and disposition of landscape and lighting. Thoroughfares provide cities with a major percentage of public open space and what is often referred to as the public realm. Thoroughfares also function to provide moving lanes for vehicles, bicycles, walking and transit. A thoroughfare is associated with a particular type of movement, and is endowed with two attributes: movement type and character. Under Miami 21 the movement type of the thoroughfare refers to the number of vehicles that can move safely through a segment within a given time period; it is physically manifested by the number of lanes and their width, by the centerline radius, the curb radius, and the super-elevation of the pavement. The character of the thoroughfare refers to its suitability as a setting for pedestrian and bicycling activities physically determined by the associated frontage types as determined by the transect. This is very different from a conventional code where thoroughfares pass through, or along, modularized land use types without regard to form or character adaptations - the road is the defining character rather than the community.

Planning Related Goals and Guiding Principles Are Articulated
Miami 21 is not only a zoning code. To better detail and guide development decisions within the City and administrative decisions within its transects, the Miami 21 Code presents a prescriptive stepwise system of goals and guiding principles from larger city-wide goals, to individual blocks, and individual building design.

  • The City - Conservation & Development Goals
  • The City - Guiding Principles
  • The Community - Guiding Principles
  • Block and the Building - Guiding Principles
For example, taking one from each category:
  • City-wide Goal - "Maintain the future growth capacity of the City core to ensure its preeminence as the transit-oriented, pedestrian-friendly focus for the region's economic, civic and cultural activities."
  • The City - Guiding Principles - "New development should be structured to reinforce a pattern of neighborhoods and urban centers, focusing growth at transit nodes rather than along Corridors."
  • The Community - Guiding Principles - "Interconnected networks of thoroughfares should be designed to disperse and reduce the length of automobile trips and to encourage walking and bicycling."
  • Block and the Building Guiding Principles - "Development should adequately accommodate vehicles while respecting the pedestrian and the spatial form of public space."

All-in-all, the Miami 21 Code represents an impressive work and now needs to move along to implementation, use, and adjustments over the next timeframe. Like all city codes, a form-based one is dynamic and evolution of one sort or another will occur over time to meet changing conditions and needs. Importantly though, this new code places a greater emphasis on the mix and pattern of neighborhoods and community to improve lives of the people that live there. This is a step forward from a conventional code where the pattern of development was strictly modularized and the day-to-day lives of people made subservient to automobile mobility and parking requirements.

For more information on Miami 21 got to: http://www.miami21.org/