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The Energy Yardstick:
Using PLACE3S to Create More Sustainable
Communities
New PLACE3S Capabilities Update
- With grant support from the U.S. Department of Energy,
the PLACE3S analytical capability is being expanded to more fully
address energy generation and efficiency options as a function
of land use and development choices.
- PLACE3S is now able to assess rent to cost
ratios for each redevelopment alternative to determine the
level of economic reality and map reinvestment hot spots.
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The capacity of local government action to enhance the
economic viability and environmental quality of this nation
is immense. Within city, county and regional governments
resides the lion's share of authority over how land and
resources are used, buildings are constructed,
transportation systems designed and operated, and growth
managed. Wise use of these authorities is vitally important
to achieving a sound future for California communities.
They are also the key to realizing Smart Growth benefits.
PLACE3S, an acronym for PLAnning for
Community Energy, Economic and Environmental Sustainability,
is an innovative planning method that fully integrates
focused public participation, community development and
design, and computer-assisted quantification tools (GIS) to
help communities produce plans that retain dollars in the
local economy, save energy, attract jobs and development,
reduce pollution and traffic congestion and conserve open
space. PLACE3S creates an information base that
functions as a common yardstick, empowering a community to
compare components of each plan "apples-to-apples," make
informed trade-offs, and arrive at a consensus Smart Growth
plan. This plan will be broadly supported, economically and
environmentally realistic, make investment sense, and
encourage Smart Growth benefits to be tracked and reported
annually.
Energy use and its effects are an effective organizing
principle for regional and community Smart Growth planning.
Comprehensive resource efficiency plans simultaneously
accomplish other community goals, including affordable
housing, increased travel options and reduced traffic
congestion, improved air quality, lower infrastructure
costs, open space and agricultural land preservation,
increased personal and business income and job retention and
creation. By advancing community understanding of Smart
Growth linkages, PLACE3S opens doors for
implementing a variety of state programs at the local level.
PLACE3S was designed specifically for local
and regional governments. The method functions within
normal planning operations via a familiar five-step process.
Broad stakeholder involvement and quantification of
demographic, economic and environmental effects are
important components of each step.
STEP 1: Start Up and Identify Existing Conditions
Establish the geographic scope of the project and its
relationship to other planning projects affecting the study
area. Begin stakeholder involvement by creating a long-term
vision for the study area and selecting indicators to
evaluate each alternative. Collect data needed to document
existing conditions (e.g., demographics, jobs, housing
stock, infrastructure, resource consumption, environmental
conditions).
STEP 2: Establish the Business-as-Usual Alternative
Project existing conditions to the end of the planning
period assuming all current policies and market trends
remain unchanged. Measure the social, economic and
environmental outcome to establish a baseline for comparing
other alternatives designed to achieve community goals.
STEP 3: Create and Analyze Alternatives
Work with the stakeholders to develop alternatives that
improve upon the expected social, economic and environmental
outcome of the Business-as-Usual Alternative. One
alternative, often called the Advanced Alternative, will
show how optimizing resource efficiency can provide economic
and environmental benefits. Stakeholders carefully review
and compare the alternatives, noting actions (or sets of
actions such as mixing land uses and adding pedestrian
amenities near transit) that contribute the greatest
benefits. By this point, stakeholders have developed a
clear and comprehensive understanding of the value and
methods of improving resource efficiency within their
community. They are now ready to make informed trade-off
decisions.
STEP 4: Create the Preferred Alternative
Review all prior alternatives with stakeholders,
carefully discussing the differences in the social, economic
and environmental outcomes expected. Assemble the best
parts of the alternatives into a new, hybrid alternative.
Quantify the social, economic and environmental outcomes
expected if this Community Preferred Alternative were to be
implemented. Make adjustments to better attain the
community's vision.
STEP 5: Adopt, Implement, Monitor and Revise
The PLACE3S database also has value after the
Preferred Alternative is adopted. Solid information reduces
uncertainty and can attract investors to build the plan.
The database can be used to estimate the net change expected
and improve our Smart Growth knowledge. The data also can
be used to measure the net effect of any proposed changes to
an adopted Smart Growth plan, protecting the community
consensus from unstudied amendments. Citizens are empowered
to make amendments as needed to ensure that Smart Growth
goals are realistic and are being met.
DOCUMENTS
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Because these documents are
"graphics-rich," they are fairly large in size. You may wish
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them with the Acrobat plug-in in your browser. To do that,
use the right mouse button and "right click" the link. For
Macintosh users, hold the option key down and click on the
link.
The PLACE3S method is discussed in detail in
The Energy Yardstick: Using PLACE3S to Create
More Sustainable Communities.
Download the Executive Summary of the PLACE3S Guidebook. (Acrobat PDF, 14 pages, 381 kilobytes)
Download the Full Document titled The Energy Yardstick: Using PLACE3S to Create More Sustainable
Communities. (Acrobat PDF, 166 pages, 2.5 megabytes)
Case Studies
Download Case Studies Report: SHINING PLACE3S - Sacramento, Calif. and National Examples of Smart Growth.
(Adobe Acrobat PDF, WEB VERSION 50 pages, 1.3 megabytes)
SHINING PLACE3S -- Sacramento, Calif. and National Examples of Smart Growth.
(Adobe Acrobat PDF, PRINT VERSION 50 pages, 12.4 megabytes, NOTE SIZE!)
What Some Are Saying About PLACE3S
| "PLACE3S has been an invaluable tool for making the benefits of coordinated land use and transportation planning strategies come alive to local officials and citizens throughout the region. It has also been very helpful in furthering the implementation of these components of the Regional Growth Management Strategy." |
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Steve Sachs, Senior Planner, San Diego Association of Governments
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"PLACE3S added value to our regional energy plan. The energy plan was widely supported because it included PLACE3S -generated estimates of the economic and environmental value of implementing the plan."
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Elliot Parks, Chair, San Diego Association of Governments Board of Directors
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"There is a good marriage between PLACE3S and GIS. PLACE3S adds value to our existing geographic information, enabling us to use data to answer a broader variety of questions such as estimating the energy effects of growth and transportation plans."
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Bob Parrott, Director of Research San Diego Association of Governments
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| "The PLACE3S study was the first time such a comprehensive assessment of energy use has been modeled for the Eugene-Springfield area. I think PLACE3S has great potential for helping policy-makers understand the full implications of land use and transportation alternatives."
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| Susan Brody, Oregon Transportation Commission
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For more information about PLACE3S, please contact:
Nancy McKeever
PLACE3S Program Manager
California Energy Commission, MS-48
1516 Ninth Street
Sacramento, CA 95814
Phone: (916) 654-3948
E-mail: NMcKeeve@energy.state.ca.us
Sacramento Region Blueprint Transportation Land Use Study - Slide Show
(April 2, 2004, Acrobat PDF file, 60 pages, 9 MEGABYTES - note file size!)
Please note: Because of file size, you may wish to download file to your hard drive rather than opening it in your browser.
Right click the link (option click on Macintosh) to force download to your computer.
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