The Plan of Nashville: Avenues to a Great City
The Plan of Nashville is a community-based vision of how the urban core of Nashville should look and work in the 21st century. The purpose is to help the central city hold its place in civic life.Since Nashville assumed a metropolitan form of government—merging city and county—there have been almost a hundred plans that dealt with some aspect of the center city.

This plan is different.The Plan was conceived and orchestrated by the Nashville Civic Design Center, which is committed to the practice of urban design. This three-dimensional discipline integrates streets and buildings, land use and transportation—a new approach for Nashville.

As a private not-for-profit, the center listens with independent ears and speaks with an independent voice. Previous plans by Metro government departments and their consultants were constrained by politics and patronage, by available funding or the need to solve specific problems.

Another significant difference from previous plans is the area of study. The Plan of Nashville is not an island bound by the noose of the interstate loop. The Plan integrates downtown with the areas that frame it via the spoke roads that are the historic entries into downtown.

Rather than taking a top down approach, the design center organized the process of listening to the community. Over 400 citizens attended a series of workshops in downtown and the surrounding neighborhoods to express their opinions and draw their dreams. The center's staff translated the results into a series of maps and illustrations, with explanatory text—that articulate a three-dimensional vision for the city that will serve as a litmus test for current and future development.

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The Plan of Nashville: Avenues to a Great City
The Plan of Nashville is a community-based vision of how the urban core of Nashville should look and work in the 21st century. The purpose is to help the central city hold its place in civic life.Since Nashville assumed a metropolitan form of government—merging city and county—there have been almost a hundred plans that dealt with some aspect of the center city.

This plan is different.The Plan was conceived and orchestrated by the Nashville Civic Design Center, which is committed to the practice of urban design. This three-dimensional discipline integrates streets and buildings, land use and transportation—a new approach for Nashville.

As a private not-for-profit, the center listens with independent ears and speaks with an independent voice. Previous plans by Metro government departments and their consultants were constrained by politics and patronage, by available funding or the need to solve specific problems.

Another significant difference from previous plans is the area of study. The Plan of Nashville is not an island bound by the noose of the interstate loop. The Plan integrates downtown with the areas that frame it via the spoke roads that are the historic entries into downtown.

Rather than taking a top down approach, the design center organized the process of listening to the community. Over 400 citizens attended a series of workshops in downtown and the surrounding neighborhoods to express their opinions and draw their dreams. The center's staff translated the results into a series of maps and illustrations, with explanatory text—that articulate a three-dimensional vision for the city that will serve as a litmus test for current and future development.

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The Plan of Nashville: Avenues to a Great City

The Plan of Nashville: Avenues to a Great City

by Christine M. Kreyling (Editor)
The Plan of Nashville: Avenues to a Great City

The Plan of Nashville: Avenues to a Great City

by Christine M. Kreyling (Editor)

Paperback(New Edition)

$39.95 
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Overview

The Plan of Nashville is a community-based vision of how the urban core of Nashville should look and work in the 21st century. The purpose is to help the central city hold its place in civic life.Since Nashville assumed a metropolitan form of government—merging city and county—there have been almost a hundred plans that dealt with some aspect of the center city.

This plan is different.The Plan was conceived and orchestrated by the Nashville Civic Design Center, which is committed to the practice of urban design. This three-dimensional discipline integrates streets and buildings, land use and transportation—a new approach for Nashville.

As a private not-for-profit, the center listens with independent ears and speaks with an independent voice. Previous plans by Metro government departments and their consultants were constrained by politics and patronage, by available funding or the need to solve specific problems.

Another significant difference from previous plans is the area of study. The Plan of Nashville is not an island bound by the noose of the interstate loop. The Plan integrates downtown with the areas that frame it via the spoke roads that are the historic entries into downtown.

Rather than taking a top down approach, the design center organized the process of listening to the community. Over 400 citizens attended a series of workshops in downtown and the surrounding neighborhoods to express their opinions and draw their dreams. The center's staff translated the results into a series of maps and illustrations, with explanatory text—that articulate a three-dimensional vision for the city that will serve as a litmus test for current and future development.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780826514592
Publisher: Vanderbilt University Press
Publication date: 01/30/2005
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 234
Product dimensions: 11.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Christine Kreyling is the author of The Plan of Nashville and co-author of Classical Nashville, both published by Vanderbilt University Press. As the architecture and urban planning critic for the Nashville Scene, she received three awards from the American Planning Association for the best writing in the nation. Kreyling was one of the founders of the Nashville Urban Design Forum and the Nashville Civic Design Center.

Table of Contents



Contents
Foreword by Mayor Bill Purcell
Preface by David Minnigan

Introduction
Nashville Past and Present
Avenues to a Great City: The Ten Principles

The Plan of Nashville
Nashville and Its Region: Making Connections
Embracing the Cumberland River
Getting Around
Nashville and Its Downtown: Creating Civic Space
The Capital City
Downtown as a Neighborhood
Nashville and Its Neighborhoods: Fanning the Flames of Place
The River District
Northeast Nashville
East Nashville
SoBro
The Gulch
Midtown
Ideas into Reality
Citizen Planners: Documenting the Process

Notes
Bibliography
Index
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