Model Design Manual for Living Streets
The Model
Design Manual for Living Streets is now available to
download.
This manual focuses on all users and all modes, seeking
to achieve balanced street design that accommodates cars
while ensuring that pedestrians, cyclists and transit
users can travel safely and comfortably. This manual
also incorporates features to make streets lively,
beautiful, economically vibrant as well as
environmentally sustainable.
Cities may use this manual in any way that helps them
update their current practices, including adopting the
entire manual, adopting certain chapters in full or
part, modifying or customizing chapters to suit each
city’s needs.
Download MS WORD or PDF
Download PDF
version
Model Design Manual for Living Streets or
editable
MS
Word version here.
About the Manual
The Model Street Design Manual was created during a
2-day writing charrette, which brought together national
experts in living streets concepts. This effort was
funded by the Department of Health and Human Services
through the Los Angeles County Department of Public
Health and the UCLA Luskin Center for Innovation. This
manual focuses on all users and all modes, seeking to
achieve balanced street design that accommodates cars
while ensuring that pedestrians, cyclists and transit
users can travel safely and comfortably. This manual
also incorporates features to make streets lively,
beautiful, economically vibrant as well as
environmentally sustainable.
Cities may use this manual in any way that helps them
update their current practices, including adopting the
entire manual, adopting certain chapters in full or
part, modifying or customizing chapters to suit each
city’s needs. See the Customization section below for
additional information. The download page features
different file formats in order to simply the editing
and customization process. Please notify this page,
using the drop down menu on the right hand panel, if you
adopt the manual in full or in part.
Since many municipalities lack the resources to
undertake a major revision of their manuals, this model
manual offers a template for local jurisdictions to
tailor to meet their specific needs. Additionally, to
lower the cost-burden to cities, the manual there are
recommendations to maximize benefits and minimize costs
associated with street design. Vital streets, innovative
parking policies, and desirable neighborhoods resulting
from living streets can increase revenues for the cities
above current levels. Research finds that cities often
experience increased economic development after adopting
elements of living streets.
Overall, this manual is intended for three groups of
users:
- Municipalities who lack the
resources to undertake a major revision
of their manuals and are looking for
examples to assist in re-tooling their
current manuals. This document may be
adopted as written, or customized for
any municipality
- Municipalities that want to adopt
the latest thinking in street design
- Designers, planners and engineers
who are looking for tools to provide
flexibility within their existing street
standard
Customization
Local jurisdictions may want to customize the The
Model Design Manual for Living Streets Manual and adopt
it, or parts of it, for their own. To do so, please
download either the Word or InDesign version and edit
the appropriate chapters. Your options for doing so
include:
1.Using in-house staff
2.Contacting the project coordinator, Ryan Snyder
Associates at 323-571-2910, ryan@rsa.cc
3.Contacting any one of the people listed in the
acknowledgements page, or
4.Using your own local consultant
The Model Design Manual for
Living Streets Chapters
1.Introduction
2.Vision, Goals, Policies and Benchmarks
3.Street Networks and Classifications
4.Traveled Way Design
5.Intersection Design
6.Universal Pedestrian Access
7.Pedestrian Crossings
8.Bikeway Design
9.Transit Accommodations
10.Traffic Calming
11.Streetscape Ecosystem
12.Re-placing Streets: Putting the Place Back in Streets
13.Designing Land Use Along Living Streets
14.Retrofitting Suburbia
15.Community Engagement for Street Design
Appendix: Visions of Transforming Streets
Model Design Manual for Living
Streets FAQ
Why is the document called a manual?
This manual provides principles of good design, as well
as a significant number of concept drawings. In many
instances, it provides the design concepts that can be
used to create construction documents from. In some
areas it provides more detail than many existing
manuals. For example, it spells out significant detail
about sidewalk cross sections along different types of
streets in different neighborhoods. It stays away from
the rigid standards that often only apply to abstract
situations. Other street manuals have more detailed
engineering guidance and are endorsed by a federal or
state agency. However, this manual has some specific
designs but moreso what is important is that this manual
address what to build when thining about creating living
streets.
How does this manual comply/address fire code concerns?
The California Fire Code can impede street design in
limited circumstances. The state legislature has adopted
the National Fire Code. The National Fire Code is
written by a private agency and has no official legal
standing unless states or municipalities adopt it, as
has been done in California. The primary barrier caused
by this adoption is the requirement for a minimum of 20
feet of an unobstructed clear path on streets. To comply
with this, streets with on-street parking on both sides
must be at least 34 feet wide. This prevents
municipalities from designing skinny and yield streets
to slow cars and to make the streets safer, less land
consumptive and more hospitable to pedestrians and
bicyclists are ways around this requirement. If the
local jurisdiction takes measures such as installing
sprinklers and adding extra fire hydrants, or the
adjacent buildings are built with fire retardant
materials, it may be able to get the local fire
department to agree to the exception. Additionally, the
California state Fire Code does exist in conflict with
properly researched guidelines and standards documented
by the Institute of Transportation Engineers and AASHTO.
Regardless, the authors understand that as part of the
process of re-thinking street design, it is important
that planners and engineers work with their local fire
department early in the process of updating their
standards.
What is the legal standing of this document?
To clarify, cities are authorized to adopt or modify
their own practices, standards, and guidelines that may
reflect differences from the Green Book and the HDM. If
these changes generally fall within the range of
acceptable practice allowed by nationally recognized
design standards, the adopting agencies are protected
from liability to the same extent they would be if they
applied the Green Book or the HDM. Most changes to
streets discussed in this manual fall within the range
of the guidelines or recommended practices of nationally
recognized organizations such as AASHTO, ITE, Urban Land
Institute (ULI), and Congress for the New Urbanism
(CNU).Unless otherwise noted, everything in this manual
can readily be adopted and incorporated without fear of
increased liability. In addition, this manual carries
the credibility of the many top-level experts who
produced it. In some cases, AASHTO design guidelines may
not provide information on innovative or experimental
treatments that have shown great promise in early
experiments and applications. Since AASHTO is a design
guide, agencies have some flexibility to use designs
that fall outside the boundaries of the AASHTO guide.
Deviation from the range of designs provided in the
AASHTO guide requires agencies to use greater care and
diligence to document their justification, precautions,
and determination to deviate from the guidelines. In
California, the precautions to establish design immunity
should be followed. These include consideration/analysis
and approval by a registered engineer qualified to sign
the plans, and certification by the city council or
reviewing body clearly indicating the intent of the
agency. This process documents the engineering judgment
that went into the design. Additionally, it is important
to note that not all the treatments in this manual fall
within the category of traffic control devices. For
example, traffic calming treatments are not traffic
control devices and as such the state exercises no
jurisdiction over them.
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