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PROCESS
A
charrette is the method of planning which Duany Plater-Zyberk &
Company, Inc. has adopted and developed in our traditional planning
practice. The term is derived from the French term for "little
cart" and refers to the final intense work effort expended
by architects to meet a project deadline. At the Ecole des Beaux
Arts in Paris during the 19th century, proctors circulated the studios
with small carts to collect final drawings, and students would jump
on the "charrette" to put finishing touches on their presentations
minutes before the deadline. The excitement of anticipation overcame
the fatigue of the previous hours of continuous work and that same
level of excitement characterizes the modern charrette. Today, designers
still gather as an atelier, typically in a single space, often on
the site of the project, to study and develop proposals in a concentrated
period of time. What is new to the process is the participation
of the full community of the projects' constituents.
The charrette provides a forum for ideas and
offers the unique advantage of giving immediate feedback to the
designers while giving mutual authorship to the plan by all those
who participate. The charrettes that DPZ orchestrates are similar
to the creative bursts described above. During this intensive session,
the following goals are accomplished: 1) all those influential to
the project develop a vested interest in the design and the shared
experience of the charrette builds broad support for its vision;
2) the group of design disciplines work in a complementary fashion
to produce a set of finished documents that address all aspects
of design; 3) this collective effort organizes the input of all
the players at one meeting and; thereby, eliminates the need for
prolonged, sequential discussions that can delay conventional planning
projects and lose the momentum of constituents; and 4) the final
result is better through the assimilation of many ideas in a dynamic
process that is also cost effective because of this collaborative
process.
A primary feature of the charrette is that
it is specifically organized to encourage the participation of everyone
who is interested in a project, whether they represent the interests
of the client or owner, the regulators, or the general public. The
level of involvement is carefully planned prior to the charrette.
The pre-charrette process begins with program
assessment, and charrette planning. The DPZ Project Manager works
in advance with your team to explain the traditional town planning
concepts and their possible impacts. Project data, preliminary development
programs, and building/zoning regulations are collected and reviewed
prior to the team's arrival on site. It is important to outline
the political approval process if necessary and generate a strategy
to include all the regulatory agencies and approving officials,
into the charrette.
The charrette itself commences on or near
the project site where architects, planners, engineers, environmental
consultants, CAD operators, your group and local public officials
assemble for approximately eight to ten days. The team of design
experts and consultants set up a full working office, complete with
drafting equipment, supplies, computers, copy machines, fax machines,
and telephones.
The Principal delivers an introductory lecture
on traditional town planning on the first evening of the charrette.
The team is thoroughly briefed on the site data and project design
parameters. Formal and informal meetings are held with various approving
agencies and interest groups during the first two to three days.
The remainder of the charrette consists of daily design and review
sessions with a closing presentation on the final day.
Specifically the charrette scope of services
includes:
An opening lecture on the first night of
the charrette. This lecture can be made to only the immediate
participants or can be used as the first real PR event to serve
to let the public know what is planned for the next several days.
The event can be highly publicized and is often used by our clients
as the first marketing event for their project. At the lecture all
of the basic principles of good neighborhood design are reviewed,
establishing some common reference points.
Leadership of the DPZ design team.
We typically bring a team of between 8 and 12 individuals to prepare
all of the graphic documents and provide technical information as
required. We are responsible for paying all of the sub-consultants
that we bring for their time spent at the charrette. Should additional
reports or studies be required, these can be contracted directly
with the sub-consultant.
Organization and coordination of all charrette
meetings and presentations. With the owner's or client's assistance,
we arrange the necessary meetings with all appropriate governmental
and/or constituent and community organizations. The design team
starts work right away producing master plans and designs, while
the principal and project manager attend all of the meetings and
bring what they learn back to the designers. The design team's proposals
and strategies are "reality tested" on a daily basis,
so it is impossible to take an unacceptable scheme too far.
A final presentation on the last night
of the charrette. As with the opening lecture this events media
exposure and size based on the needs of the project. The presentation
of the plans shapes the perception the project. All of the work
produced during the charrette is presented and explained.
Completion and refinement of the drawings
subsequent to the charrette. After the charrette, there are
always minor refinements that need to be made to the documents.
Often, new information becomes available that affects the work.
Included in our fee is a full generation of post-charrette changes
to the planning documents.
PRODUCT
The documents produced at the charrette are
formatted into a booklet containing the following list of documents,
all of which are produced during the charrette in draft or final
form
Master Plan rendered in color, showing
the location and platting of all private property, public tracts
and surface infrastructure, as well as the schematic design of parks
and other neighborhood amenities and phases of development.
Preliminary CAD Plan, of the first
Phase, tied to the survey, showing, all right's-of-way, centerlines,
curbs, pavement widths, rear lanes and alleys, sidewalks, and lot
lines.
Perspective Drawings (4), rendered
in color, showing typical streets, squares, parks, and other locations.
Detailed Plan, rendered in color, showing
the ideal build-out of a key portion of the site.
Draft Prototypical Building Floor Plans,
showing representative models for each building type, based upon
the architecture of the region.
- A series of Diagrams in black and white
that may include:
- A diagram of the regional structure and/or
existing conditions.
- A diagram of the concept of neighborhood
planning.
- A diagram of public buildings and spaces.
- A diagram of the private lots.
- A diagram of the open space network.
- A diagram of the vehicular network (circulation
and parking).
Regulating Plan keyed to the Urban
Regulations and the Street Sections. This plan regulates the land
use and density of the various building types that occur in the
Master Plan.
Urban Regulations specifying each building
type in terms of use, setbacks, heights, ancillary elements, and
location of parking.
Architectural Regulations specifying
building construction in terms of techniques, configurations, and
materials.
Thoroughfare Standards specifying the
various street designs within the public right-of-ways shown in
the Regulating Plan.
The documents listed above are identical for
all DPZ projects that are not solely architectural in nature. Through
our experience we have determined the elements and techniques necessary
to deliver the most sustainable pedestrian and environmentally designed
plans whether they take the form of a neighborhood designed as a
small village covering a few acres, or multiple neighborhoods designed
to create a town or city covering thousands of acres.
SCHEDULE & FEES
Please contact Senen Antonio to discuss fees and schedule.
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