Summary: | The Greater Vancouver Region is in an era of growth, fundamental change, and reexamination
of regional and local quality of life. Within this context, the complete
community policies of the Livable Region Strategic Plan have been developed to help
achieve a region where human community flourishes within the built and natural
environment. At the same time as these policies respond to change, they also demand
significant alterations to community and regional priorities and practices. Accepting and
pursuing complete community objectives of compactness, diversity and choice in existing
suburban communities represents particular challenges. While regional policy reflects a
general appreciation of this fact, understanding these challenges from a local perspective is
essential to successfully weaving complete community goals into the existing regional
fabric, and is the problem addressed by this thesis.
Through both a literature review and case study approach, the research sought to identify
the factors which support and constrain progress towards more complete communities
through local planning in established neighbourhoods. The thesis focuses on the case study
of the Lynn Valley community planning process in order to explore how the local
perspective might modify inherently regional complete community goals and expectations.
The study concludes that achieving a balance between regional goals and local interests is
most critical in the Greater Vancouver metropolitan setting. The Lynn Valley case
suggests that factors affecting community planning outlined in the literature are realistic
and valid in practice. It further suggests that the prospects for achieving complete
communities in established neighbourhoods will be influenced by local perspectives on:
growth, change, aging in place, and a spirit of fairness in accepting change among local
communities. The complete community vision resonates at the local level. Complete
community objectives and strategies may be accepted locally to the degree they are seen as
a means to achieve community aspirations and improve the quality of life of residents over
their life cycle. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Community and Regional Planning (SCARP), School of === Graduate
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