Zoning and the Special Theater District in New York

2012 ◽  
Vol 174-177 ◽  
pp. 2472-2480
Author(s):  
Hao Jiang ◽  
Si Jia Jiang

This paper evaluates the effectiveness of New York City’s attempts to promote its theater industry through zoning tools, which sheds light on balancing historic preservation and sustainable development. Using the original zoning resolutions and secondary data, this paper will analyze the changing problems, solutions, costs and benefits of setting up a Special Theater (Sub)District in order to protect a socially-desirable use and to recapture the value of private development at the same time. It will conclude that landmarking the theaters to be preserved provided them with legal protection and substantial funds created by the transfers of development rights (TDRs), while controls on Floor Area Ratio (FAR), usage and contextual requirements effectively shaped the area’s three dimensional form; the Special Theater Subdistrict has been highly successful.

2017 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-121
Author(s):  
Masahiro Taima ◽  
Yasushi Asami ◽  
Kimihiro Hino

Block restructuring has been strongly emphasized in Japan for renovating cities. However, little is known about the relation between block size and building shape. Moreover, the shape of buildings designed on a block after restructuring is unclear. In this study, the relation between block size and building shape is analyzed quantitatively, and a three-dimensional building shape is estimated by a model using an urban planning GIS data set of Tokyo. Results show the quantitative relation between block size and building shape, and the building shape image on the blocks. Higher buildings and buildings with a basement tend to be built in larger blocks, leading to efficient use of the maximum volume permitted in the block. In addition, the region composed by larger blocks can be spacious, because the range of building setback will be long in larger blocks. Designation of a high floor area ratio may induce integration and enlargement of blocks. Blocks are less likely to be partitioned in zones when a high floor area ratio is designated.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Masahiro Taima ◽  
Yasushi Asami ◽  
Kimihiro Hino

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Block restructuring has been strongly emphasized in Japan for renovating cities. However, little is known about the relation between block size and building shape. Moreover, the shape of buildings designed on a block after restructuring is unclear. Some estimation methods for urban physical status, such as building footprint location, floor area, and land use, have been developed in previous research. Taima et al. (2016) developed a model to estimate the building footprint area by using GIS. The future image of the building footprint on various blocks is visualized. Similarly, Asami and Ohtaki (2000) developed a model to estimate detached house location. Orford (2010) developed a methodology for estimating the floor area of individual properties from digital infrastructure data. Shiravi et al. (2015) assessed the utility of some models for estimating floor area using three data sources: a geographic vector building footprint layer, a LiDAR data set, and field survey data for the south side of the city of Fredericton, Canada. They discussed the reliability and accuracy of each model. In other research, Brunner et al. (2009) extended a methodology for building height estimation and tried to improve its accuracy. Schmidt et al. (2010) presented an approach to the estimation of building density on the block scale. Land use (Debnath and Amin, 2016; Jiang and Liu, 2012) and floor area (Orford, 2010) are popular topics and estimated in previous studies of the urban field, but estimation of building shape has seldom been a focus in the literature. Three-dimensional estimations of buildings cannot be found. If software to estimate building shape by block shape and other conditions was developed, it would be useful to determine urban planning, such as population estimation and landuse estimation. In this study, an estimation model is developed and applied to certain areas. In this study, the relation between block size and building shape is analyzed quantitatively, and a three-dimensional building shape is estimated by a model using an urban planning GIS data set of Tokyo (Figure 1 and 2). Results show the quantitative relation between block size and building shape, and the building shape image on the blocks. Higher buildings and buildings with a basement tend to be built in larger blocks, leading to efficient use of the maximum volume permitted in the block. In addition, the region composed by larger blocks can be spacious, because the range of building setback will be long in larger blocks. Designation of a high floor area ratio may induce integration and enlargement of blocks. Blocks are less likely to be partitioned in zones when a high floor area ratio is designated.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 3382
Author(s):  
Xiaoyong Zhang ◽  
Zhengchao Chen ◽  
Yuemin Yue ◽  
Xiangkun Qi ◽  
Charlie H. Zhang

The floor area ratio is a comprehensive index that plays an important role in urban planning and sustainable development. Remote sensing data are widely used in floor area ratio calculations because they can produce both two-dimensional planar and three-dimensional stereo information on buildings. However, remote sensing is not adequate for calculating the number of floors in a building. In this paper, a simple and practical pixel-level model is established through defining a quantitative relationship among the floor area ratio, building density, and average number of floors (ANF). The floor area ratios are calculated by combining remote sensing data with publicly available Internet data. It incorporates supplemental map data and street-level views from Internet maps to confirm building types and the number of floors, thereby enabling more-accurate floor area ratio calculations. The proposed method is tested in the Tiantongyuan neighborhood, Changping District, Beijing, and the results show that it can accurately approximate the number of floors in buildings. Inaccuracies in the value of the floor area ratio were found to be primarily due to the uncertainties in building density calculations. After performing systematic error correction, the building density (BD) and floor area ratio were each calculated with the relative accuracy exceeding 90%. Moreover, the experiments verified that the fusion of internet map data with remote sensing data has innate advantages for floor area ratio calculations.


2013 ◽  
Vol 336-338 ◽  
pp. 1412-1415
Author(s):  
Cheng Wu Wang ◽  
Zhi Hao Mao ◽  
Jia Qi Lei

GIS technology has been applied in city planning management and virtual city. It still hasnt got more substantive achievements on aided design of regulatory plan. The notion of Modeling-Incubator has been advanced and integrated with GIS, which is the key resolution and method to 3D simulation of regulatory plan indexes, such as building coverage, floor area ratio, building interval etc. This resolution will be applied in regulatory plan assessment.


2012 ◽  
Vol 450-451 ◽  
pp. 614-617
Author(s):  
Yi Zhou Wu ◽  
Bo Li

Floor area ratio (FAR) is fundamentally important for urban economic development and for urban design, planning and management. This paper tried to enhance the texture information of the QuickBird image by using HIS and PCA transform methods in Yiwu city as a case study. An object-based method was proposed to process the enhanced QuickBird image for the shadow of buildings and building object areas, and the building heights were accurately calculated based on the shadow of buildings. The building object areas and heights were integrated with an administrative district map in Yiwu city to estimate FAR. Tests with this above method demonstrated excellent accuracy in terms of FAR estimation. The high spatial resolution images have great potential in quickly and accurately estimating FAR, providing a scientific basis to policy makers and urban planners.


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