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Reducing Sprawl

 Goals 1 and 2 of the Growth Management Act are to reduce the inappropriate conversion of undeveloped land into sprawling, low-density development, and instead encourage development where adequate public facilities and services exist or can be provided in an efficient manner.

Urban sprawl is scattered, poorly planned urban development that occurs particularly in urban fringe and rural

Areas and frequently invades land important for environmental and natural resource protection.  Urban sprawl typically manifests itself in one or more of the following patterns:

  1. Leapfrog development (when new development is sited away from an existing urban area, bypassing vacant parcels located in or closer to the urban area that are suitable for development)
  2. Strip development (when large amounts of commercial, retail, and often multifamily residential development are located along a major arterial)
  3. Large expanses of low-density, single-family dwelling development.

The Central Puget Sound Growth Management Hearings Board concludes that there are at least eight major negative consequences of sprawl:

  1. it needlessly destroys the economic, environmental and aesthetic value of resource lands
  2. it creates an inefficient land use pattern that is very expensive to serve with public funds
  3. it blurs local government roles, fueling competition, redundancy and conflict among those governments
  4. it threatens economic viability by diffusing rather than focusing needed public infrastructure investments
  5. it abandons established urban areas where substantial past investments, both public and private, have been made
  6. it encourages insular and parochial local policies that thwart the siting of needed regional facilities and the equitable accommodation of locally unpopular land uses;
  7. it destroys the intrinsic visual character of the landscape
  8. it erodes a sense of community, which, in turn, has dire social consequences

Smart Growth is a movement to counteract sprawl.  The goals of Washington’s Growth Management Act align closely with Smart Growth strategies.  Strategies include:

  • The preservation of open space, farmland, natural beauty, and critical environmental areas.
  • Compact, attractive communities that provide a range of housing and transportation choices.
  • Distinctive communities with a strong sense of place, and strong public participation.

Resources:

Photo:  Compact urban development in Olympia, Wash

 
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