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Live work planning and design : Zero-commute housing

By: Publication details: New Jersey John Wiley & Sons 2012Description: xiv,237pISBN:
  • 9780470604809
Subject(s):
DDC classification:
  • 728 DOL
Contents:
CONTENTS Preface xi Acknowledgements xiii Preface xi Acknowledgments xiii Chapter 1: Introduction: A Brief History and Description of Live-Work 1 The Modem and the Shipping Container 2 Zero Commute Living 4 Overview of Live-Work 5 Live-Work Types and Terminology 6 Live-Work Planning and Urban Design 6 The Role of Artists 7 Building Codes 7 Common Mistakes in Live-Work 8 Retrofitting Suburbia 8 Chapter 2: Defining Live-Work 10 Live-Work Use Types 11 Home Occupation 11 Live/Work 12 Work/Live 14 Live-Work Proximity Types 16 Live-With Proximity Type (Synonym: Loft) 17 Live-Near Proximity Type 17 Live-Nearby Proximity Type 18 Live-Work Project Types 19 Warehouse Conversion (District) 19 Home Office 20 Townhouse Project Type (Synonym: Shophouse) 21 Flexhouse Project Type: A Building that Learns 21 Courtyard Live-Work 22 Urban Loft Complex 23 High Density/Podium 24 Other Definitions Related to Live-Work 25 Lifestyle Loft (Synonym: Lawyer Loft) 25 Telecommuting 25 Telework Center (Synonym: Coworking) 25 Cohousing 25 Cohort Housing 26 Zero-Commute Living 26 Zero-Commute Housing 26 District 26 Neighborhood 26 Live-Work Neighborhood 27 New Urbanism 27 Smart Growth 27 Form-Based Coding 27 The Transect 27 Work-Use Intensities in Live-Work 28 Chapter 3: Designing Live-Work: Meeting Its Unique Needs 29 Genesis of Live-Work Design 29 User Needs and Live-Work Design 31 Project Types 34 Renovation versus New Construction 34 Rental versus For Sale 35 Artists’ Lofts versus “Lifestyle Lofts” 36 Work/Live and Home Occupation 36 Design Elements in Live-Work 37 Residential and Workspace Facilities 37 Level of Finishes in a Live-Work Unit 39 Accommodating and Relating to the Outside World 40 Employees 40 Walk-in Trade versus Client Visits by Appointment 40 Parking: Open Commercial Access versus Residential Privacy and Security 40 Design for Community 42 Making a Place That Is More than the Sum of the Number of Units 42 Common Residential Facilities 43 Coworking Space 43 Business Center 43 Other Common Work Facilities 43 Formal Community Types 44 Common Live-Work Unit Designs 44 Live-With Proximity Type 44 Live-Near Proximity Type 46 Live-Nearby Proximity Type 47 Other Unit Configurations 49 Development Types 49 Live- Work Renovation Development 49 Urban Infill Development 49 Greenfield Development 51 Design of Project Types 52 Project Type: Warehouse Renovation 52 Case Study: Willow Court 53 Case Study: Clocktower Lofts 55 Case Study: California Cotton Mills Studios 56 Project Type: Live-Work Courtyard Community 58 Case Study: South Prescott Village 59 Project Type: Flexhouse 59 Case Study: Serenbe 63 Case Study: The Waters 64 Case Study: Seaside 66 Case Study: Mount Laurel 67 Case Study: Hampstead 68 Case Study: Glenwood Park 68 Case Study: Pinetree Studios 69 The Urban Design of Townhouses and Flexhouses 71 Project Type: Housing over Retail and Live-Nearby 71 Case Study: Rosemary Beach 72 Case Study: Celebration 73 Project Type: Infill Lofts 73 Case Study: Yerba Buena Lofts 74 Project Type: Podium/High-Rise Liners, Flexhouses, and Lofts 75 Case Study: Liner Units at The Sierra 75 Chapter 4: The Market for Live-Work 77 Examining the Market for Live-Work 77 The End-User Market for Live-Work 78 The Developer/Investor Market for Live-Work 85 Case Study: The Lofts at Habersham 87 Marketing Live-Work 90 Norton Commons 90 The Basics of Marketing 91 Selling Live-Work 91 Marketing Materials 92 Marketing Communications 92 Conclusion 93 Chapter 5: Live-Work and Community: A Natural Marriage 94 Introduction Zero-Commute Living 95 Building Live-Work, Building Community: An Interview with Architect Thomas Dolan 96 Community Building with Live-Work 99 Neighborhood Scale 99 A Live-Work Neighborhood 100 A Complete Neighborhood 101 A Lifelong Community 101 Live-Work Building Types and Community 103 Design for Community in Multi-unit Live-Work Buildings 104 An Important Discovery: The Live-Work Courtyard Community 106 Case Study: Ocean View Lofts 107 Chapter 6: Live-Work Planning Issues and Regulatory Solutions 110 Introduction 111 Placemaking with Live-Work and Form-Based Codes 113 The Best Locations for Live-Work 118 Planning for Live-Work Types as Parsed by Work-Use Intensity 120 Home Occupation 120 Live/Work 121 Case Study: James Avenue Live-Work Compound 122 Work/Live 123 Planning for Live-Work Types as Parsed by Proximity Type 124 Live-With Proximity Type 124 Live-Near Proximity Type 125 Live-Nearby Proximity Type 127 Planning for Live-Work Types as Parsed by Project Type 128 Artists’ Work/Live Rental Renovation 128 Market Rate Live-Work Condominium Renovation 129 New Construction Lofts 130 The San Francisco Experience 130 Live-Work Courtyard Communities 133 Townhouse Live-Work 134 Flexhouse 134 Development Standards 136 Relaxed Development Standards 136 Work Uses Permitted 137 Employees and Walk-In Trade 137 New Construction versus Renovation 137 Separation of Functions 139 Maximum and Minimum Unit Size 139 Proportion of Live to Work Area 140 Open Space 140 Parking and Traffic 140 Loading 143 Noise and Odor Generation 143 Design Review 144 Inclusionary Zoning 144 Codes and Permitting Processes 144 Social Issues and Planning Responses 145 Warehouse Conversions and the SoHo Cycle 145 The New Urban Workplace 146 Rental versus Ownership 147 Imported NIMBYism and its Impact on Commercial and Industrial Districts 148 Residential Reversion 148 Work/Live in Vancouver 149 Disclosures, Covenants, Lease Clauses, and Nuisance Easements 149 Gentrification 150 Neighborhood Amenities 150 Neighborhood Revitalization 150 The Role of Artists in a City 151 Urban Live-Work Revitalization Stories 151 The Continuing Role of Artists and Others in the Evolution of Live-Work 154 Legalization of Illegal or Quasi-Legal Live-Work 156 Tribeca and Uptown: A Tale of Two Cities, Three Thousand Miles, and Forty Years Apart 156 Case Study: Dutch Boy Studios 160 Industrial Protection Zones 162 Do-It-Yourself Development 101, A Possible Scenario 163 Affordability 164 Compact, Pedestrian-Oriented Communities 165 Chapter 7: Live-Work Building Code Issues 167 Regulating This Strange Animal Called Live-Work 167 Overall Building Life Safety 168 Building Code Primer 169 Occupancy and Occupant Load Factor 168 Construction Type, Height, and Allowable Area 173 Wall Rating and Openings in Walls Near Property Lines 176 Exits/Means of Egress 177 Sprinklers 178 Fire Alarms and Smoke Detectors 179 Hazardous Occupancy 180 Lateral Forces, Seismic Standards, and Change of Occupancy 181 Floor Loads 183 Codes That Apply within Live-Work Units 183 Fire Separation within a Unit 183 Separation between Units and between Units and a Corridor 184 Emergency Escape and Rescue 184 Mezzanines and Sleeping Lofts 185 Habitability Issues: Minimum Residential Facilities 189 Noise and Sound Transmission 195 Energy Conservation 196 Accessibility 197 Administrative Modification Requests 197 Shell Construction 198 Building Code Issues by Project Type 198 Townhouse 198 Flexhouse 199 Home Occupation 199 New versus Renovation 199 Master Building Code Matrix 199 Chapter 8: Epilogue 200 Appendix A: Toward a Model Live-Work Planning Code 202 Use of Appendix A Tables 202 Work Uses Permitted 202 Work Use Intensities and Allowable Unit Areas 202 Live-Work Location and Project Types 207 Walk-in Trade and Employees by Location and Project Type 207 Live-Work Planning Topics, Objectives and Suggested Regulations 207 Appendix B: Model Live-Work Building Code System 213 2009 International Building Code Section 419 213 Building Code Provisions Not Spelled Out in IBC Section 419 213 Code Provisions that Apply in Live-Work Renovations Only 219 Artists’ Relaxations 219 Legalization Process 221 Shell Construction 221 Mixed Occupancy 221 Use of the Model Live-Work Building Code System 221 Appendix C: Live-Work Resources 223 Books 223 Web Sites 225 Endnotes 226 Index 227
List(s) this item appears in: L3 oikopolis | MHD_URBAN HOUSING
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book CEPT Library Faculty of Architecture 728 DOL Available 020239
Total holds: 0

CONTENTS
Preface xi
Acknowledgements xiii
Preface xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Chapter 1: Introduction: A Brief History and Description of Live-Work 1
The Modem and the Shipping Container 2
Zero Commute Living 4
Overview of Live-Work 5
Live-Work Types and Terminology 6
Live-Work Planning and Urban Design 6
The Role of Artists 7
Building Codes 7
Common Mistakes in Live-Work 8
Retrofitting Suburbia 8
Chapter 2: Defining Live-Work 10
Live-Work Use Types 11
Home Occupation 11
Live/Work 12
Work/Live 14
Live-Work Proximity Types 16
Live-With Proximity Type (Synonym: Loft) 17
Live-Near Proximity Type 17
Live-Nearby Proximity Type 18
Live-Work Project Types 19
Warehouse Conversion (District) 19
Home Office 20
Townhouse Project Type (Synonym: Shophouse) 21
Flexhouse Project Type: A Building that Learns 21
Courtyard Live-Work 22
Urban Loft Complex 23
High Density/Podium 24
Other Definitions Related to Live-Work 25
Lifestyle Loft (Synonym: Lawyer Loft) 25
Telecommuting 25
Telework Center (Synonym: Coworking) 25
Cohousing 25
Cohort Housing 26
Zero-Commute Living 26
Zero-Commute Housing 26
District 26
Neighborhood 26
Live-Work Neighborhood 27
New Urbanism 27
Smart Growth 27
Form-Based Coding 27
The Transect 27
Work-Use Intensities in Live-Work 28
Chapter 3: Designing Live-Work: Meeting Its Unique Needs 29
Genesis of Live-Work Design 29
User Needs and Live-Work Design 31
Project Types 34
Renovation versus New Construction 34
Rental versus For Sale 35
Artists’ Lofts versus “Lifestyle Lofts” 36
Work/Live and Home Occupation 36
Design Elements in Live-Work 37
Residential and Workspace Facilities 37
Level of Finishes in a Live-Work Unit 39
Accommodating and Relating to the Outside World 40
Employees 40
Walk-in Trade versus Client Visits by Appointment 40
Parking: Open Commercial Access versus Residential Privacy and Security 40
Design for Community 42
Making a Place That Is More than the Sum of the Number of Units 42
Common Residential Facilities 43
Coworking Space 43
Business Center 43
Other Common Work Facilities 43
Formal Community Types 44
Common Live-Work Unit Designs 44
Live-With Proximity Type 44
Live-Near Proximity Type 46
Live-Nearby Proximity Type 47
Other Unit Configurations 49
Development Types 49
Live- Work Renovation Development 49
Urban Infill Development 49
Greenfield Development 51
Design of Project Types 52
Project Type: Warehouse Renovation 52
Case Study: Willow Court 53
Case Study: Clocktower Lofts 55
Case Study: California Cotton Mills Studios 56
Project Type: Live-Work Courtyard Community 58
Case Study: South Prescott Village 59
Project Type: Flexhouse 59
Case Study: Serenbe 63
Case Study: The Waters 64
Case Study: Seaside 66
Case Study: Mount Laurel 67
Case Study: Hampstead 68
Case Study: Glenwood Park 68
Case Study: Pinetree Studios 69
The Urban Design of Townhouses and Flexhouses 71
Project Type: Housing over Retail and Live-Nearby 71
Case Study: Rosemary Beach 72
Case Study: Celebration 73
Project Type: Infill Lofts 73
Case Study: Yerba Buena Lofts 74
Project Type: Podium/High-Rise Liners, Flexhouses, and Lofts 75
Case Study: Liner Units at The Sierra 75
Chapter 4: The Market for Live-Work 77
Examining the Market for Live-Work 77
The End-User Market for Live-Work 78
The Developer/Investor Market for Live-Work 85
Case Study: The Lofts at Habersham 87
Marketing Live-Work 90
Norton Commons 90
The Basics of Marketing 91
Selling Live-Work 91
Marketing Materials 92
Marketing Communications 92
Conclusion 93
Chapter 5: Live-Work and Community: A Natural Marriage 94
Introduction Zero-Commute Living 95
Building Live-Work, Building Community: An Interview with Architect Thomas Dolan 96
Community Building with Live-Work 99
Neighborhood Scale 99
A Live-Work Neighborhood 100
A Complete Neighborhood 101
A Lifelong Community 101
Live-Work Building Types and Community 103
Design for Community in Multi-unit Live-Work Buildings 104
An Important Discovery: The Live-Work Courtyard Community 106
Case Study: Ocean View Lofts 107
Chapter 6: Live-Work Planning Issues and Regulatory Solutions 110
Introduction 111
Placemaking with Live-Work and Form-Based Codes 113
The Best Locations for Live-Work 118
Planning for Live-Work Types as Parsed by Work-Use Intensity 120
Home Occupation 120
Live/Work 121
Case Study: James Avenue Live-Work Compound 122
Work/Live 123
Planning for Live-Work Types as Parsed by Proximity Type 124
Live-With Proximity Type 124
Live-Near Proximity Type 125
Live-Nearby Proximity Type 127
Planning for Live-Work Types as Parsed by Project Type 128
Artists’ Work/Live Rental Renovation 128
Market Rate Live-Work Condominium Renovation 129
New Construction Lofts 130
The San Francisco Experience 130
Live-Work Courtyard Communities 133
Townhouse Live-Work 134
Flexhouse 134
Development Standards 136
Relaxed Development Standards 136
Work Uses Permitted 137
Employees and Walk-In Trade 137
New Construction versus Renovation 137
Separation of Functions 139
Maximum and Minimum Unit Size 139
Proportion of Live to Work Area 140
Open Space 140
Parking and Traffic 140
Loading 143
Noise and Odor Generation 143
Design Review 144
Inclusionary Zoning 144
Codes and Permitting Processes 144
Social Issues and Planning Responses 145
Warehouse Conversions and the SoHo Cycle 145
The New Urban Workplace 146
Rental versus Ownership 147
Imported NIMBYism and its Impact on Commercial and Industrial Districts 148
Residential Reversion 148
Work/Live in Vancouver 149
Disclosures, Covenants, Lease Clauses, and Nuisance Easements 149
Gentrification 150
Neighborhood Amenities 150
Neighborhood Revitalization 150
The Role of Artists in a City 151
Urban Live-Work Revitalization Stories 151
The Continuing Role of Artists and Others in the Evolution of Live-Work 154
Legalization of Illegal or Quasi-Legal Live-Work 156
Tribeca and Uptown: A Tale of Two Cities, Three Thousand Miles, and Forty Years Apart 156
Case Study: Dutch Boy Studios 160
Industrial Protection Zones 162
Do-It-Yourself Development 101, A Possible Scenario 163
Affordability 164
Compact, Pedestrian-Oriented Communities 165
Chapter 7: Live-Work Building Code Issues 167
Regulating This Strange Animal Called Live-Work 167
Overall Building Life Safety 168
Building Code Primer 169
Occupancy and Occupant Load Factor 168
Construction Type, Height, and Allowable Area 173
Wall Rating and Openings in Walls Near Property Lines 176
Exits/Means of Egress 177
Sprinklers 178
Fire Alarms and Smoke Detectors 179
Hazardous Occupancy 180
Lateral Forces, Seismic Standards, and Change of Occupancy 181
Floor Loads 183
Codes That Apply within Live-Work Units 183
Fire Separation within a Unit 183
Separation between Units and between Units and a Corridor 184
Emergency Escape and Rescue 184
Mezzanines and Sleeping Lofts 185
Habitability Issues: Minimum Residential Facilities 189
Noise and Sound Transmission 195
Energy Conservation 196
Accessibility 197
Administrative Modification Requests 197
Shell Construction 198
Building Code Issues by Project Type 198
Townhouse 198
Flexhouse 199
Home Occupation 199
New versus Renovation 199
Master Building Code Matrix 199
Chapter 8: Epilogue 200
Appendix A: Toward a Model Live-Work Planning Code 202
Use of Appendix A Tables 202
Work Uses Permitted 202
Work Use Intensities and Allowable Unit Areas 202
Live-Work Location and Project Types 207
Walk-in Trade and Employees by Location and Project Type 207
Live-Work Planning Topics, Objectives and Suggested Regulations 207
Appendix B: Model Live-Work Building Code System 213
2009 International Building Code Section 419 213
Building Code Provisions Not Spelled Out in IBC
Section 419 213
Code Provisions that Apply in Live-Work Renovations
Only 219
Artists’ Relaxations 219
Legalization Process 221
Shell Construction 221
Mixed Occupancy 221
Use of the Model Live-Work Building Code
System 221
Appendix C: Live-Work Resources 223
Books 223
Web Sites 225
Endnotes 226
Index 227

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