Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham Centre

This article traces three decades of planning for a Canadian suburban downtown in Markham, Ontario, an early adopter of new urbanism. While leading new urbanist design firm Duany Plater-Zyberk & Co. (also known as DPZ) produced site plans for both Cornell and Markham Centre, much of the research...

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Main Author: Katherine Perrott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2020-12-01
Series:Urban Planning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3543
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spelling doaj-fc9b595e940547c19a22fac815fddea72020-12-22T09:52:00ZengCogitatioUrban Planning2183-76352020-12-015410.17645/up.v5i4.35431802Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham CentreKatherine Perrott0Faculty of Environmental and Urban Change, York University, CanadaThis article traces three decades of planning for a Canadian suburban downtown in Markham, Ontario, an early adopter of new urbanism. While leading new urbanist design firm Duany Plater-Zyberk & Co. (also known as DPZ) produced site plans for both Cornell and Markham Centre, much of the research attention on the implementation of new urbanism has focused on the Cornell development, where build-out began in the 1990s. Construction was delayed in Markham Centre until a decade later and continues today. The article is empirically grounded in a discourse analysis of policy, housing advertisements, and interviews with key actors in the planning and development process. New urbanism’s popular influence has led Fulton (2017) to argue that a ubiquitous urbanism now “just shows up.” Mainstreaming of new urbanist principles and the discursive framing of planning for Markham Centre as an ‘evolution’ further underscores this perception. Key actors describe an ‘organic’ planning process illustrating how the plan has changed in response to shifting market dynamics, political interests, and funding opportunities. The article explores the discourse about new urbanism and argues that in Markham Centre new urbanism has not just shown up, but has rather required a deliberate, collaborative, and adaptable process. Development that is transit oriented and attractive to knowledge economy workers underpins the contemporary vision. New urbanism as a label is losing relevance in Markham, where sprawl represents the past, new urbanism describes the legacy of 1990s planning, and a ‘real’ competitive urbanism is the vision for the future.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3543discourseknowledge economymarkhamnew urbanismorganic metaphorsuburban downtownsuburbstransit-oriented development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katherine Perrott
spellingShingle Katherine Perrott
Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham Centre
Urban Planning
discourse
knowledge economy
markham
new urbanism
organic metaphor
suburban downtown
suburbs
transit-oriented development
author_facet Katherine Perrott
author_sort Katherine Perrott
title Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham Centre
title_short Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham Centre
title_full Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham Centre
title_fullStr Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham Centre
title_full_unstemmed Does New Urbanism “Just Show Up”? Deliberate Process and the Evolving Plan for Markham Centre
title_sort does new urbanism “just show up”? deliberate process and the evolving plan for markham centre
publisher Cogitatio
series Urban Planning
issn 2183-7635
publishDate 2020-12-01
description This article traces three decades of planning for a Canadian suburban downtown in Markham, Ontario, an early adopter of new urbanism. While leading new urbanist design firm Duany Plater-Zyberk & Co. (also known as DPZ) produced site plans for both Cornell and Markham Centre, much of the research attention on the implementation of new urbanism has focused on the Cornell development, where build-out began in the 1990s. Construction was delayed in Markham Centre until a decade later and continues today. The article is empirically grounded in a discourse analysis of policy, housing advertisements, and interviews with key actors in the planning and development process. New urbanism’s popular influence has led Fulton (2017) to argue that a ubiquitous urbanism now “just shows up.” Mainstreaming of new urbanist principles and the discursive framing of planning for Markham Centre as an ‘evolution’ further underscores this perception. Key actors describe an ‘organic’ planning process illustrating how the plan has changed in response to shifting market dynamics, political interests, and funding opportunities. The article explores the discourse about new urbanism and argues that in Markham Centre new urbanism has not just shown up, but has rather required a deliberate, collaborative, and adaptable process. Development that is transit oriented and attractive to knowledge economy workers underpins the contemporary vision. New urbanism as a label is losing relevance in Markham, where sprawl represents the past, new urbanism describes the legacy of 1990s planning, and a ‘real’ competitive urbanism is the vision for the future.
topic discourse
knowledge economy
markham
new urbanism
organic metaphor
suburban downtown
suburbs
transit-oriented development
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/urbanplanning/article/view/3543
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