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Stantec


David Dixon FAIA is Stantec’s Urban Places Planning and Urban Design Leader. He has worked with cities and suburbs alike to create a new generation of walkable urban places that help communities manage and benefit from the accelerating pace of demographic and economic change. David has been honored for his post-Katrina Master Plan for New Orleans and many other projects by the American Planning Association, the American Institute of Architects, the Congress for New Urbanism, and other national organizations. He received the AIA’s highest honor for achievement in the public sphere, the Thomas Jefferson Award for initiating public dialog about the value of walkable density and Residential Architecture named David as the recipient of its 2012 Hall of Fame Award “as the person we call about cities.” David co-authored Urban Design for an Urban Century: Shaping More Livable, Equitable, and Resilient Cities (Wiley, 2014). He is the co-editor and one of the authors for Suburban Remix: the next generation of urban places (Island Press) 2018.


Presentation

Suburban Remix

As the developed world grows younger and older and its economic focus shifts toward knowledge industries, demand is rising for a new generation of walkable urban places to better position communities respond to markets and to compete for knowledge industry workers, jobs, and investment. As market values for denser, mixed-use, walkable—urban—environments rise relative to strip retail centers and outmoded office parks, suburbs are emerging as the next urban frontier.


While this next generation of urban places relies primarily on private investment, ironically it places new emphasis on civic leadership and public/private partnerships. In era of growing income disparities new urban places require a conscious focus on equity to avoid creating a generation of “gated downtowns”. To achieve their promise as the civic, economic, and social heart of community life, these urban places are shaped by principles inspired by traditional Main Streets but adapted to the very different scale and development realities of the 21st century:


  • Above all, they’re walkable—distinguished by lively sidewalks, animated by a wide variety of amenities that invite people to walk.
  • They connect to their community at many levels—by bike, on foot, by transit—and by the dominant mode of the next two decades—autonomous mobility.
  • They enjoy a multilayered public realm—from “active” squares to places of quiet reflection together with civic spaces.
  • They offer a diverse mix of choices—for living, working, shopping, and playing, geared to diverse lifestyles.
  • They are authentic—defined by the living culture and ecology that distinguish a community.