In mid-April, I had the fortunate opportunity to represent Arlington Transportation Partners in Chicago, IL at the American Planning Association National Conference. This conference was attended by thousands of city planners, transportation planners, government officials and others focused on building great cities. At any given time, there were presentations on bicycle programs, transportation funding, building complete streets, community engagement, water conservation and the dreaded 'D' word - density. Among them was me, a transportation demand management professional, who happens to also be an urban planning student, trying to navigate the sprawling conference rooms of the Chicago Hyatt.
My first tweet came before I event attended a single session:
An #APA2013 irony: a session on density was over capacity. People being turned away.
— Brett Jones (@jonesbrettw) April 13, 2013
Yes, the first session I tried to go to, about increasing density in cities, did not have room for me.
Things quickly improved, however. Later that day, during a session called Reinventing Neighborhoods with Transportation Investment, I learned about efforts in Cleveland to make transit more appealing:
Transit investment in Cleveland includes a patented mango scent to make station smell good #APA2013
— Brett Jones (@jonesbrettw) April 14, 2013
Personally, I'd be more than fine if all DC area Metro stations smelled like mangoes. Later on, I found myself learning about ways to improve safety for pedestrians and cyclists, something dear to Arlington's heart (read here about the PAL campaign). One presentation in particular focused on Chicago's ambitious plans to eliminate pedestrian fatalities, through a focus on increasing the connectivity of neighborhoods:
Chicago's 'Zero in Ten' plan aims to reduce pedestrian fatalities each year to zero within 10 yrs. Focus on connectivity. #APA2013
— Brett Jones (@jonesbrettw) April 14, 2013
The same session also included great discussion on one of my favorite topics: how to build 'walkable neighborhoods':
City govts can provide policy structure for creating walkability, but local neighborhoods should drive implementation #apa13
— Brett Jones (@jonesbrettw) April 14, 2013
It struck me during this presentation exactly how well Arlington represents a positive model for this type of development, given its focus on Urban Villages and transit oriented development. A session on site-plan review made me particularly thankful for the work Arlington does - other jurisdictions seem to pay more attention to building design, and ignore aspects of how development fits into a community, and creates access to transportation options:
This site plan review speaker is apparently ok with strip mall and cul-de-sac development long as building is well designed. Wrong! #apa13
— Brett Jones (@jonesbrettw) April 16, 2013
Of course, over four days of conference, there was much more that I learned, shared and experienced. It was a great conference, and I enjoyed the opportunity to connect with planners from throughout the country, and hear about innovative transportation strategies. And, Chicago was a great host - one of my favorite cities to walk around, with some excellent dining opportunities! My only real complaints for the week were the lack of conference WiFi, and the horrible weather that cancelled two of my flights and kept me in Chicago an extra day. Both are small prices to pay for the amount of knowledge gained!