2009
DOI: 10.1080/13574800903265496
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Evaluating New Urbanist Plans in Post-Katrina Mississippi

Abstract: Immediately following Hurricane Katrina, the Mississippi Governor's Commission for Recovery, Rebuilding and Renewal partnered with the Congress for the New Urbanism to provide teams of planners and designers to work with communities along the coast in preparing rebuilding plans. Following a week-long charrette in October 2005, each coastal community was provided with a rebuilding plan that was intended to be based on the principles of New Urbanism. The initial plans have been followed up with further long-rang… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…Third, a local comprehensive plan has been employed from various prior studies as an effective measure to assess a community's long-range visions and preparedness for future developments. Starting from early 1990s, many previous studies assessed diverse topics, including natural hazards [32][33][34][35], affordable housing [36], green infrastructure [37], land use pattern [38], new urbanism [39], sustainable development [21,40], smart growth [41], and urban sprawl [42]. These studies, however, have mostly adopted the content analysis method that was generally relying on Kasier et al's plan evaluation approach [43].…”
Section: Literature Gaps and Research Objectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, a local comprehensive plan has been employed from various prior studies as an effective measure to assess a community's long-range visions and preparedness for future developments. Starting from early 1990s, many previous studies assessed diverse topics, including natural hazards [32][33][34][35], affordable housing [36], green infrastructure [37], land use pattern [38], new urbanism [39], sustainable development [21,40], smart growth [41], and urban sprawl [42]. These studies, however, have mostly adopted the content analysis method that was generally relying on Kasier et al's plan evaluation approach [43].…”
Section: Literature Gaps and Research Objectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is also vital that leadership for these design initiatives be initiated by both the federal and the state government (Bathurst, et al 2011). Once these are initiated, it is imperative that communities and local businesses become fully engaged in the evolutionary design processes prior to the disaster (Popkin, 2006;Cowley-Evans, 2009;Talen, 2008).…”
Section: Conclusion and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Mississippi Gulf Coast has worked incrementally, since the years following Hurricane Katrina in 2005, to create a more sustainable region. Community planning efforts were initiated immediately after Hurricane Katrina and resulted in initial rebuilding plans for incorporated communities, but these initial plans were focused on urban design visions, making them limited in their scope for long-term implementation (Evans-Cowley and Gough 2009). Then in 2006, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development provided funds to the Mississippi Development Authority to enable production of longer-term comprehensive planning for each of the eleven cities and three counties on the Mississippi Gulf Coast.…”
Section: Assessing Mississippi Gulf Coast Livabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%