Laserfiche WebLink
03/04/97 16:26 FAX '((. 003 <br /> METROPOLITAN LIVABLE COMMUNITIES DESIGN COURSE <br /> offered by <br /> The Design Center for American Urban Landscape <br /> College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture <br /> University of Minnesota <br /> Course Description <br /> The Metropolitan Livable Communities Design Course is an intensive, six-week immersion for city <br /> staff and officials in the planning, implementation, and policy issues presented by part ', <br /> challenges facing four to six first-ring municipalities. <br /> The course is an outgrowth of the Design Center for American Urban Landscape's multi-year <br /> examination of issues facing first-ring communities. Funded by a series of grants from <br /> the <br /> McKnight Foundation, the Design Center's work has sought to identify challenges of common <br /> concern to the first ring and to develop strategies that draw first-ring communities together in <br /> addressing those challenges. <br /> Each of the participating cities will bring to the course an issue of current concern. These 'focus <br /> issues" will be the subject of the courses, during which the Design Center and interdisciplin2n' <br /> resource teams will work with each community to assess design, finance, policy, and brei <br /> implementation implications of that community's focus issue. <br /> The Course is rooted in the desire to assist communities in developing practical strategies for tackling <br /> their particular focus issue. In the process, however, it also seeks to accomplish four related goals: <br /> 1. To enable a city to examine its focus issue from a variety of perspectives, • <br /> utilizing a team of experts working in a neutral and educational setting. <br /> 2. To enlist a cross-section of community representatives in a community team <br /> — citizens, elected official, city staff— that will not only actively participate in <br /> the Course, but will carry ideas and strategies back to their community; <br /> 3. To involve participants in an exchange of expertise, insight, and strategies <br /> with the other municipal participants; and <br /> 4. To develop approaches that can be implemented in other communities. <br /> Course Structure <br /> The course will run for six weeks, from mid-April to late-May. At the heart of the course are the <br /> focus issues, one from each community. Each focus issue will emphasize a different type of <br /> planning/policy issue common to first-ring communities. Together, the complement of issues : I <br /> constitute a wide range of urban design/policy questions confronting communities on a daily basis. <br /> After a city has proposed its focus issue and before the start of the Course, the Design Center WI, <br /> meet with the community team to define the facets of the issue the community wishes to address and <br /> the outcomes the community would like to see achieved. <br /> The Design Center will subsequently prepare a "Briefing Book"that will include both a summary of <br /> these discussions and a collection of supporting materials. This book will serve as the course <br /> workbook, to which materials can be added as the course proceeds: background summaries, related • <br /> reading material, lists of resource people, interim working drawings, policy memoranda, and the like. <br />