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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
October
Street-design project to
be focus of planning meetings in Macomb, Ill.
Liz deAvila,
News Bureau intern
217-244-0470; deavila@uiuc.edu
10/24/05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
A team of students and faculty members from the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign will be traveling to Macomb, Ill., Nov. 4-5 to participate
in planning and design meetings that will focus on rethinking the use
and design of Macomb’s West Jackson Street (Illinois Route 136).
The route runs
through the center of the city and eventually will intersect with the
planned Illinois Highway 336 bypass.
The meetings, which planners call a charrette – an intensive,
multiple-day collaborative community planning activity – will
take place from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Nov. 4 and 9 to 11:30 a.m. on
Nov. 5 at 1520 W. Jackson St., Macomb. The meetings are open to the
public.
The charrette is one of many planning tools that will be used as part
of a new collaborative project between U. of I. Extension, which is
affiliated with the College of Agricultural,
Consumer and Environmental Sciences, and the department of urban
and regional planning in the College
of Fine and Applied Arts. The partnership was formed earlier this
fall as a collaboration among Illinois communities and the U. of I.’s
planning and design faculty and students to benefit communities without
access to professional planners.
Kathleen Conlin, the dean of the College of Fine and Applied Arts, said
the college was proud of the joint effort and its current venture in
Macomb.
“Our faculty, in tandem with students and leaders, are experienced
in leading efforts to improve conditions where we live,” Conlin
said. “This is a terrific opportunity for demonstrating the impact
of research and teaching on behalf of the state of Illinois.”
The new project, called “Community Matters,” has an initial
timeline of three years, during which as many communities as possible
will be selected to be part of the collaboration. The project architects
hope to make the program a continuing one.
“We are delighted to be a part of this partnership,” said
Dennis Campion, associate dean of Extension and Outreach. “Bringing
together the expertise of local citizens, Extension and faculty to help
solve problems is a marvelous example of the university engaged in collaboration
with citizens in their own communities.”
The Extension Community Economic Development (CED) team will help selected
communities investigate different areas of need, and later bring the
collected information to the overall project design.
Pattsi Petrie, outreach and professional education coordinator for the
department of urban and regional planning, suggested possible future
projects “Community Matters” might engage in with a community.
“Different projects might be – besides highway enhancement
– designing parks, bicycle pathways, improving downtown facade,
and designing houses – and any other issues of economic development
within the community,” Petrie said.
The work in Macomb is the pilot project of “Community Matters.”
Petrie said the charrette, which will also extend the collaboration
to include Western Illinois University students, will serve as an open
forum for community members to “test” ideas for the West
Jackson Street corridor.
Kathleen Brown, extension educator for CED, said the charrette is intended
to stimulate design ideas for the corridor plan while including the
voice of the community.
“This will be an important conversation,” Brown said. “We
hope to find out what their (Macomb citizens’) preferred businesses
will be, what type of cultural amenities could be added, what could
be enhanced.”
Specifically, Macomb residents will be able to propose their visions
for the corridor, which will intersect with the Illinois Highway 336
ring road at the west and allow entrance into the city.
University students will also facilitate the community discussion and
contribute their skills and knowledge, while benefiting from the hands-on
learning experience.
Petrie said the U. of I. students – enrolled in the team-taught
course Urban Planning 494-P – have been gathering information
on Macomb to better understand the community in preparation for the
charrette. She stressed that student involvement always will be an important
element of “Community Matters.”
“We always have to be sure there is an educational aspect,”
Petrie said. “There is learning on both sides of the table. It’s
win-win: We research, and the community profits from our expertise.”
Future communities will apply to “Community Matters” using
an application still in the design phase. Petrie said the current plan
is for communities to be chosen twice a year, with the first official
round of selections scheduled for January 2006.
The second round
is tentatively planned for August 2006, but is subject to change. Communities
not selected for the first round are eligible to apply for the second.
A “Community Matters” team, consisting of an Extension representative,
an affiliate of the department of urban and regional planning, and other
project-specific individuals, will review the communities’ applications
and information.
Along with the application, communities must submit all relevant studies,
reports or plans done for or by the community during the past five years.
Small, rural communities and metropolitan neighborhoods that have limited
access to planning are encouraged to apply, Petrie said.
For more information about the program, contact Petrie
at 217-244-7424 or 217-333-3890. In Macomb, contact Brown
at 309-836-2084 or .
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