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Green neighborhood offers 'community' feel

Lindsey Pruitt

Issue date: 4/30/08 Section: News
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The UA Community Design Center has developed a new vision of neighborhood for the Washington County chapter of Habitat for Humanity: no sidewalks, no curbs, no gutters and no flooding, even after torrential rain, according to a press release.

Porchscapes: An Affordable LEED-Neighborhood Development, the official name for the project, was awarded a 2008 ASLA professional award in planning and analysis from the American Society of Landscape Architects, according to the ASLA Web site.

The project was developed by the UA design center in partnership with Professor Marty Matlock of the Ecological Engineering Group in the UA Division of Agriculture, the Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, the city of Fayetteville and McClelland Consulting Engineers, according to the press release.

The project also was given a $23,000 grant by the UA Women's Giving Circle and a $464,000 grant by the Arkansas Natural Resources Commission to support the design phase, according to the press release.

"I am very proud of the project," said Kendall Curlee, director of communications for the UA School of Architecture. "The community design center has won so much for sustainable development that it raises our national awareness for the school.

"The planet is growing, and we need to find a way to live light on the land," she said. "This kind of development is very important."

The Porchscapes plan means residents will benefit from a "shared street" - on track to be the first of its kind in the U.S. - that promotes community, slows down cars and soaks up stormwater like a sponge, according to the press release.

There are four overreaching principles of the project: density and compactness, walkable streets, street network and access to public space, and solar orientation, according to the ASLA Web site.

"The University of Arkansas is taking a leadership role with this low-impact development project," said Bobby Hernandez, community planner for the Environmental Protection Agency's Region 6, which includes Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Louisiana and New Mexico, according to the press release.
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