HomeMy WebLinkAbout2006-06-12 06-229 RESOLVEItem No,
as 229
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Item/Subject Resolve, Accepting and Adopting Ore May 17, 2006 Report of the Task Force to
Enhance Earl Future Architectural Character.
Responsible Department: Community and Economic Development
Commentary:
Afterdiscussion with various members of the City Council, Council Chairgohn Cashwell convened a
taskfone composed of design profa-sionals, representativesaf downtown businesses, the Historic
Preservation Commission, and vanous City staff to develop architectural standards fordevelopment
and redevelopment projects within thedowntown, waterfront, Main Street Corridor, and Bass Park.
That group has now completed its work and presented its final report.
This reportemphasizescertam core values relevant to downtown development including: a serol of
history, unique character, safety, diversity, human character, density, sustalnabllity, economic
vitality, and civic art. On the basis of these values, the task force then proposed spedficstandards
tomeetthesevalues. Thetask force believes that these standards provide appropriate constraints
that" prevent the erasion of core community values while allowing and encouraging creativityand
appropriate outcomes.
The attached resolve will accept and adopt the report and direct the Council and its Committees to
use the recommended standards in evaluating projects that may be constructed on Gty owned
property. ItalsodVects staff to publicize the reportand standards and to workwith private property
owners In the covered areas toward voluntary compliance with drem.
Department Head
Members of the Task Pone met recently will the Tanspornaton and Infrastructure Committee
to review their work and report. The Committee voted to recommend to the II Council that the
report be accepted and adopted.
�
Gty Manager
Aasociatetl Information: Report
Finance Director
Legal Approval:
Soliciror
Passage
_ First Reading Page _ of _
Radia l
_ 06 229
Assigned Co Cowdlov 6eatrlck love 13. 20(16
CITY OF BANGOR
(TRUE.) Resolve, Accepting and Adopting the May 17, 2006 Report of the Task Force to
Enhance Bangor's Future Architectural Character
WHEREAS, the Chair of the Bangor City Council established a Task Force to Enhance BangoYs
Future Architectural Charas, and
WHEREAS, the task force was charged with developing architectural standards for development
on Ctty-owned real estate located within the core area of dawmrnwn, in the
waterfront area of downtown, within the Main Street downtown corldor extending
to Bass Park, and within Bass Park; and
WHEREAS, these standards are meant to promote the construction andfor rehabilitation of
buildings that are architecturally appropriate to their surroundings by helping
potential developers understand the community values which their designs must
satisfy to be acceptable to the qty; and
WHEREAS, the City intends that these standards also be used as guidelines for renovation or
construction W buildings on privately -owned land within the same area described
above to Include both large and small construction and rehabilitation projects and
projects undertaken by public sector institutions;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CRY OF BANGOR, THAT
The attached Report of the Task Foote to Enhance Bargo/s Future Architectural Character is
hereby accepted and adopted.
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, THAT
These guidelines shall be used by the City Council and the various Council Committees in
reviewing the design of projects proposed for City owned properties within the downtown,
waterfront, Main Street Corridor, and Bass Park areas.
BE R FURTHER RESOLVED, THAT
City staff shall take steps to publicize these guidelines and make them available to property
owners and potential developers Within the areas covered. In addition, staff shall work with
owners and developers toward voluntary compliance with these standards for all new
construction and renovation projects in the covered areas.
I6 CIn wwCI1
June 1 2006
Passe
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ITT "EML RESOLVE
May 171 kreoHne the
May IJP 2006 Report
Fw cbe 'hie ore
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Character
os 229
Downtown Bangor is still blessed with an existing inventory of
buildings whose authenticity has given them and the spaces
they occupy meaning and significance that grows naturally over
time.
Safety
Downtown is densely developed and populated by people who
are strangers to one another, and is inherently noisy and busy.
A downtown that not only is safe, but also feels safe, 24 hours
a day allows people to fully engage in the activities that abound
there.
Every streetscape, open space, and building design should
incorporate lighting, lines of sight and other elements that
create a safe environment. Designs should have clarity that
identifies where it is safe to go, and what are public, private,
and semi-public spaces.
Designs should take into account four distinct seasons in which
safety factors change for drivers and pedestrians.
Diversity
Downtown should support diverse uses by a diverse population
Multi -use buildings add to downtown's capacity for diversity.
Public spaces and dvit amenities should foster diversity.
Diversity is a key ingredient in a city that has become a rich
and vibrant place to live, work, and play; diversity supports
continued economic growth.
Humane Character
Sbeetscapes, open spaces and buildings should be designed
with people's comfort and well-being in mind. Downtown
Bangor is a place where design, density, complex function, and
high -activity issues are addressed with full regard for human
use and enjoyment.
00 229
Report oftbe Teek FNceto Enhance Bangor's Future Architectural Character
Executive Summary
May 17, 2006
Task Force Mission: The Task Force was appointed Ins Mayor John Cashwell to develop
architectural standards for downtown development an City-owmm teal estate located:
• in the wa[Mroat area of tlovmtavn,
• within the downtown care area,
within the Main Spee[ dowhtoxn condor,
• within Eris Park.
The standards will lead to the construction of buildings that are architecturally appropriate to
Meir surroundings, by helping potential devebpers understand the community values which Nan
designs must satisfy to be acceptable to Me Ery. These standards also provide guidedines for
developers rescinding or conducting buildings on priyatelNownetl land within Me area
described above. The standards apply M developers of large chwntovn projects, individual
property pioneers wanting to build or renovate a downtown property, and all public rector
m rtiNhons that are major downtown Wndowners.
Task Force Process: The eight member task force was chant by Michael Opwley. Three city
stagers assisted Me task force. _
The fiord two meetings provided members with background information and were cleanest by
several councilors. SNR and severaltask force rt:vnbes also shared what they Sentified as
"best practices" from their research of design goidelines used by other communaies in Maine and
throughout the U.S.
Task force members agreed Mat they would identify communly valves relevant M downtown
tlerelopment, and create tough staMards based on that set of values.
Carel Values Rekwant to Downtown Development
,.Lose offbi;i: History W "a past and in the making. Downtown Is culurally
crushed! by provlang a sense of continuity NrougMut Me part, the present and plans
for Me future.
•Ungoeo cangd.Downtown's character will not be diminished. Access and views to
water, significant sides, and ,in some ress e, existing structures will be preserved.
•AvOmnOW... Bangor prefers N have a downtown whose buildings and public
infrastructure dearly reference the time in which MW were bunt and the activities and
Mads of people thing them, to a place that relies on replimuch of the part or of
buildings whose auMeMddty Is based elsewhere.
•salary: Every streetswpe, open space, and building design should Incorporate elements
Mat create a safe environment Designs shculd use into account four distinct seasons In
which safety factors charge.
•Onamosi Downtown should support and furter averse uses by a diverse population.
Diversity supports continued economic growth.
.Humane Character. Downtown Bangor is a place where design, denslry, mmplex 06 229
function, and high-activdy, Issues are addressed nnN full regard for human use, comfort
and enjoyment
•Dem/ry..- Downtmwn land is a scarce commodity. Densityfacilitates commerdal arts
sodal interaction, pronw[g vii and diversity, and encourages a focused view in
design.
•Susbv/nabHky: omwntown a a permanent place whose buildings should be constructed
to exist and fund up for many generations. Downtown requires amendable commercial
spaces. Buildings shouts share open space and resources, and should support alternative
Imnspormi modes that Include walking, baking, and public transportation.
•Emhousk tbefityr Private prolerx should enhance downtown's economic vitality and
must demonstrate sustained profitability. Buildings and public spaces Nat demonstrate
design emllence can go farther and became "destinations" Nat draw people and
greater a enornlc activity to dmwntmwn.
•Ov/b,4 t Civic art, including visual art and space created for public peAomranres, helps
the community both attain and keep Its identity. It stimulates the economy and improves
the community's quality of life.
Design Standards Supporting Care Valum:
The full domment notes the values supported by each standard, and provkhes guidelines to
daily the meaning and scope of each standar.
• Build W the Sidewalk
• Provide Mufti -Tenant, Pedestrian -Oriented Development at the Street Level
Acceptance Pnmary Entrances
• Encourage the Inclusion of Local asreder
• Come]On-Site Parbng
UUlhe Quality Construction Methods and Materials
• Design Buildings with Human Scale
Intensity of She Use
• Integration with Overall Development Plan
• Appropriate Lighting ® Signaler
Task Force Conclusions: The Design Standars provide appropriate constraints to prevent the
erosion of the community's core values. They are general enough N allow and encourage
creativity and appropriate outcomes Nat have yet m be imagined.
Report of the Task Force to Enhance Bangor's Future 06 229
Architectural Character
May 17, 2006
Statement of Purpose
This documentprovides architectrraistandams for downtown
development on Oty-owned real estate located:
• m the waterfrontarea ofdowatown,
• within the downtown core area,
• within the Main Street downtown comidor,
• within Bass Park.
The standards are meant to lead to the construction of bulldlngs that
are archrtectumlly appropriate to their surroundings, by helping
potential developers understand the community vales which their
designs must satisfy to be acceptable to the Gty.
fie Oty intends that these standards also be used as guidelines for
renovation or construction ofbuiidings on pnvately-owned land
within the same area described above. The standards apply to
developers of large downtown projects, individual property owners
wanting to build or renovate a downtown property, and all public
sector institutions that are major downtown landowners:
"Now the great fundlnn of the dty is
to permit, indeed to encourage and
mate, the greatestpotenhalnumber of
meetings, encounters, challenges,
between allpeisons classes andgroups,
providing as it were, a stage upon
which the drama of social life may be
enacted, with the actors taking their
tum as spectators and the spectators as
actors. "
Lewis Mumford
o6 229
Shared Community Values (underlying building guidelines) Wt —�
Buildings not only shape our physical world but should also reflect
our community's shared values. Bangor's shared values inform the
design standards in this document.
Sense ofHistoty
History is of the past and in the making. Downtown should
provide a sense of Bangor's history. Future development can
respect and respond to the history and stories of this place, and
also be aesthetically of its own time and responding to the
needs of the present and the future. Downtown is culturally
enriched by providing a sense of continuity throughout the
past, the present and plans for the future.
What is built in our time becomes a story within the larger story
of Bangor. Every story must be honest, coherent, enduring and
provocative.
Unique Character
Bangor's downtown is a collection of special places, building
types, styles, architectural details, and town form, as well as
commercial, cultural, government, recreational and residential
activity. It has not, and will not, develop a homogeneous and
predictable appearance that diminishes its unique character.
Development plans should preserve access and views to water,
significant vistas, and even existing structures in some cases.
Authenticity
In an authentic place one can trust their assumptions about
their physical surroundings.
Downtown Bangor values what is genuine about itself. Our
residents and visitors feel connected to this place because It is
not contrived. Bangor prefers to have a downtown whose
buildings and public infrastructure Beady reference the time in
which they were built and the activities and needs of people
using them, to a place that relies on replication of the past or of
buildings whose authenticity is based elsewhere.
Buildings and public spaces are developed to interact with I'. 229
those around them to enhance people's experience of being
downtown. Transportation and parking needs should not
intrude unnecessarily.
Density
Downtown land is a scarce commodity. Density facilitates
commercial and social interaction.
According to Jane Jacobs in The Dsafh and Life of Great
American Cities, density is critical "to generate exuberant
diversity in a city's streets and districts." Density promotes
vitality and diversity. Dense urban places are representative
and democratic in character; experientially diverse and exciting.
Density encourages a focused view in design.
Sustainati ity
Downtown is a permanent place, and its buildings are meant to
exist and function for many generations. Sustainability
encompasses "green" construction practices, the reuse of
existing buildings, the creation of buildings with long life spans,
and the creation of buildings with built-in Flexibility to allow for
differing future uses and ultimately the ability to recycle the
components and materials at the end of the building's life span.
Economic sustainability suggests that downtown requires
affordable commercial spaces and that investment in these
spaces can provide returns necessary to support it.
Buildings should share open space and resources such as
parking, and services such as delivery and refuse pick-up.
Buildings and their surrounding amenities should support
alternative transportation modes that include walking, biking,
and public transportation.
=IP
EMMMIC Vitality
Private projects should enhance downtown's economic vitality
and must themselves demonstrate sustained profitability.
Buildings and public spaces that demonstrate design excellence
can go farther and become "destinations" that draw people and
greater economic activity to downtown.
Civic Art
Visual art for public spaces, and performing arts presented in
public spaces, nourish the publics spirit and soul. Both visual
art and space created for public performances help to define
the public space and articulate what is distinct about the space
and the downtown. They can honor the past while expressing
community aspirations for the future.
Civic art stimulates the cultural life of the region, promotes
economic development, cultural tourism, downtown and
neighborhood revitalization, international prestige and
recognition, and an improved quality of life for a community.
Civic art leads visitors as well as inhabitants into the discovery
of a city. Over time a work of art or architecture becomes an
important link to a city's past, from which future generations
glimpse the perceptions and attitudes of their predecessors.
When the work is new, it can help people understand today's
ideals and traditions and the changes going on around them.
Civic art helps the community both attain and keep its identity
Design Standards 06
1. Build to the Sidewalk
The place where the building and the sidewalk meet is the most
important spot in downtown. This is the pedestrian network where
the interaction between people on the sidewalk and businesses in the
buildings is most intense. It is a threshold across which commerce
and activity must cross. Street level restaurants, shops, stores and
businesses are all accessed at that line, and the more continuous it is
the greater possibility for success they will all experience. A gap in
the length of facades will create an area of low activity and low
commercial potential in the same way a vacant lot will, and should be
avoided wherever possible.
Buildings, as they meet the ground, also form the space around our
city streets. The shape of the streetscape is created by the height
and location of the buildings which line the sides. A mid -rise street
wall which aligns fairly consistently with the street edge implies that
the individual buildings defer to the street. Buildings which meet the
street acknowledge the greater importance of the public space
through which the streets run. They can, in this way, create an
awareness of the greater importance of the civic whole, where
building facades are shaped by the public spaces rather than the
other way around.
Values Supported Sense of History
Dense Urban Character
Economic Vitality
GUIDELINES
• Downtown buildings shall be built to the property line to the greatest extent
possible when the property line is adjacent to the street.
• Developments shall meet the property lines at the lower four floors. Provisions
will be made for exceptions such as outdoor cafes on the lower floor and for
public plans which are coordinated with public outdoor spaces.
2. Provide Multi -Tenant, Pedestrian -Oriented 06 229
Development at the Street Level
Development along new or existing public streets should foster a
walkable and enjoyable pedestrian environment. New development
should avoid large expanses of blank walls, should provide frequent
street level entries, and should provide sidewalk amenities such as
street furniture and lighting that encourage year-round and evening
hour pedestrian activity. Buildings sited along major streets should
utilize traditional storefront design principles along the ground floor,
and provide engaging displays and clear glazing to enhance the
pedestrian experience. Varied paving textures and/or elevation
changes should be used to define entrances, pedestrian areas, and
crosswalks.
Values Supported Dense Urban Character
Sustainability
Diversity
Economic Vitality
GUIDELINES
• Buildings shall provide street -level, pedestrian-orlented uses on all street
fronts.
• street frontage shall be not be occupied by uses which have no need for
or discourage walk-in traffic.
• Drive-through uses shall be accessory to the primary use of the building
and designed and located not to dominate the streetscape or Impair
pedesMan movements.
• Building design shall encourage multi -tenant omupancy at the lower two
Floors.
• Consider providing visitor drop-off areas at public building entries for easy
loading/unloading and other temporary parking.
• Residential Projects shall consider outdoor terraces and balconies for
residents along the public ROW to bring activity to the street.
Levels of privacy shall be included In the design to mark transitions from
public to semi-public to semi -private to private space. "
Development projects shall feature an outdoor pedestrian space scaled to
the demands of the building's use. Patios, dining facilities, public art and
street furniture are encouraged to enhance activity and diversity on the
street. When designing pedestrian areas consider:
o Solar exposure to maximize sunlight.
o Protection and relief from vehicular environment.
o Structured and/or informal seating or wafting opportunities.
o Street furnishings (trash receptacles, information kiosk), focal
elements (water features, sculpture or natural site feature, public
art), light and power.
o Consider views outward from the pedestrian area at sitting and
standing levels.
Where pedestrian circulation paths cross vehicular routes, a change in
paving materials, textures or colors shall be provided to emphasize the
conflict point, improve visibility, enhance safety, and provide added
aesthetic appeal with the pedestrian access primary.
3. Accentuate Primary Entrances 06 2%
City dwellers will feel more comfortable and safe downtown if they
feel welcome and accommodated. If the streetscape offers cues to
the use of buildings, and is clearly defined as a human place, people
will be less frustrated living and working there.
Primary entrances connect to lobbies and elevators, while storefront
entrances open onto ground level businesses. Because buildings seen
from the street present foreshortened views, it is often difficult to
distinguish one from the other—even when a large opening has been
created for the lobby entrance. Providing some indication from the
sidewalk about the location of the entrance can make using the
building more pleasant.
Larger buildings which do not provide lobby entrances on each street
may force pedestrians to search for the way in. Not only can
buildings provide indications of the entrance locations, but they can
offer multiple ways into the building, making downtown more
comfortable for everyone.
Ease-of-use issues like this can increase the sense that downtown
was created for and belongs to everyone. Buildings which cooperate
with larger scale, city-wide issues regarding the way people move
within downtown can assist in creating a comfortable place.
Values Supported Humane Character
Safety
Civic Art
GUIDELINES
• targe buildings which front multiple streets shall provide multiple
entrances. Building entrances which connect to a central lobby shall be
distributed on different street facing facades.
• Primary building entrances shall be accentuated.
Primary entrances shall open onto public sidewalks along the primary
street frontage.
ao 229
• Service entrances and loading facilities shall be located at the rear or side • t
of structures and screened from public view.
• Where buildings face more than one public street, service and loading
circulation may be looted along secondary streets where appropriate.
• Where no off-street options are available, loading and service entrances
located along public streets shall occupy the minimum space necessary
and be compatible with the other uses of the street, including pedestrian
activities, retail development, and traffic Flow.
• The sharing of service circulation and loading facilities between buildings
is encouraged.
Civic art and artistic crafting of building materials can help distinguish
building entrances.
• Storefront areas shall incorporate significant landscaping (including
canopy trees). Frontage design and signage locations shall be coordinated
with the placement of plant material.
00' 229
4. Encourage the Inclusion of Local Character `
Our city is a collection of what we find valuable in our region, the
visual form of the city with its special places, building types,
architectural details and city form, as well as the everyday and
special activities of our diverse population and their individual and
collective cultures. Within this collection of activities lies an individual
spirit, valuable because it gives us a stronger sense of identity in a
world which is quickly losing individuality.
The fact that individuals and corporations find it unique, memorable,
distinctive, and humane is a strong economic force and a key
element in the creation and nourishment of a healthy community.
Values Supported Sense of History
Unique Character
Authenticity
Humane Character
Sustainability
Economic Vitality
GUIDEUMES
• The use of quality local materials is encouraged / local character shall be
included in the design.
• Materials selection shall consider limited use of non-renewable resources.
• Care shall be taken to avoid nostalgic reproductions, but to use the
materials in a meaningful manner.
• Design shall not mimic, diminish or obscure the existing historic fabric.
• Buildings shall represent the era in which they are designed and may
include modem use of quality construction materials.
• Building designs and treatments that express corporate identity shall not
take precedence over these design guidelines and such development shall
conform to the historic and architectural considerations in these
guidelines.
• Buildings that are stylized in an attempt to identify a particular tenant,
particularly where the proposed architectural design is the result of a
corporate or franchise prototype design, shall not take precedence over
06 223
these design guidelines and such development shall conform to the
historic and architectural considerations in these guidelines.
Extended bands of corporate/franchise colors unrelated to the architecture
shall be avoided.
06-.229
S. Control On -Site Parking
As development increases downtown, parking demand will increase
and should be planned for and developed as an integral component
of a successful city core. Acknowledging this, and the positive and
negative impact that structured parking can have on the fabric of
downtown, requires that attention be paid to the potential conflicts
on-site parking can create.
Parking garages are generally considered necessary but unfortunate
and expensive components to downtown development. Their costs
can vary widely depending upon the complexity of the design, and
are difficult to recoup. These factors contribute to a pattern of
development where open sided concrete frame garages with sloped
floors take the place of occupied buildings. The problem with these
structures is not what they create—useful storage for cars—but in
what they displace—pedestrian oriented street -level activity. -
Parking uses and the appearance of parking structures should not
dominate public streetscapes. Parking structures should be
compatible with adjacent uses and architecture in form, bulk,
massing, articulation, and materials. The design of parking structures
should create a visually attractive and active pedestrian environment
by incorporating retail, commercial, and residential uses along all
public streets.
Garages that build -in space for retail functions at street level
preserve the vitality of other businesses on the street and maintain
the continuous pedestrian streetscape
Values Supported Dense Urban Character
Humane Character
Diversity
Economic Vitality
GUIDELINES
• Parking shall occur at imenor courts or above or below grade. It shall not
occur a<grade along property (Ines which are adjacent to a street, or at
the first floor.
Where above -ground structured parking is located at the perimeter of a
• building, this shall be screened in such a way that cars are not visible fromO O 2'%9
adjacent buildings or the street
• Bike racks are encouraged. Place racks at locations that do not obstruct
the I'm of pedestrians, are easily identifiable, visible and convenient to
customer entrances.
Above -ground parking shall be designed in such a way that neighboring
buildings are not adversely affected by headlights.
Light fixtures installed in the intenors of parking garages shall be fully
screened from the exterior or utilize full cut-off shielding.
• Al above -grade parking structures shall include usable retail, commercial
uses, commercial display or civic art spaces along street frontages W
create a high quality urban environment.
• Parking structures should have one story of mixed uses on the street
level.
• Visible diagonal ramps and non -horizontal parking plates shall be screened
from all visible angles whenever possible and not allowed on primary
facades unless it can be clearly demonstrated that these very elements
enhance the overall architectural resign In a meaningful way.
• Loading docks shall not be visible from the street.
6. Utilize Quality Construction Methods and Materials
The well-built building can provide a sense of continuity and history u 229
simply by being around for a long time. This is because buildings can
tell a history of our city as part of the urban fabric. They can remind
us of our past and the story of our lives in Bangor, and make us feel
that we belong to something bigger than ourselves. Their appearance
can affect our immediate sense of pride, and our developed sense of
continuity; the slower the physical world around us changes, the
more permanent it feels, and the more we will feel a part of a city
that existed before us and will exist after us.
Downtown buildings should not only provide the appearance that
they will be there for a long time, they should also provide facades
and structures which actually will be there for a long time. Well-built
buildings provide greater resale value, and by holding their value
longer can help the economic viability of the whole city center.
Property can be affected by the value of adjacent property, and as
poor quality buildings age, the value of neighboring properties and
buildings may decrease.
A stock of quality buildings which can be used for a relatively long
time can also be a better use of natural resources. If the design and
mnstruction facilitate extended use, less energy may be spent
creating new building materials. Energy costs could easily be higher
in the future, raising construction costs and limiting incentives for
new construction.
Further, reconstruction and mitigation of problems related to poor
building methods affects more that just the property owner. It
impacts the city's movement around the building as scaffolding is
installed at the sidewalk and as traffic is impacted by the work.
Values Supported Sense of History
Authenticity
Humane Character
Sustainability
Safety
U 22°
06 223
GUIDELINES
Buildings shall be built as high-quality, long-term components integrated
• into the urban fabric.
• Buildings shall be constructed to be as maintenance free as possible and
shall be designed to achieve a life span greater than seventy-five years.
• A building Is at the end of Its lifespan when factors Including operating or
maintenance costs, repair or reconstruction casts, and pressure for more
Flexible spaces, among others, outweigh the cost of building a new similar
building.
• Building design shall incorporate LEED criteria for sustainability. The LEED
(Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Green Building Rating System® is
voluntary, Consensus -based national shat for developing high-performance,
sustainable buildings. Developed by the U 5. Green Building Council.
Buildings shall have a built-in Flexibility to their design and recognize that
• buildings frequently undergo akerations to conform to uses not considered
in the original design.
• Consideration shall be given to Floor -to -floor heights and structural grids
as they may Impact possible future uses.
• Consideration shall be given to the design of exterior walls and skins of
buildings. These shall not be considered sacrificial surfaces to be replaced
several times in the life of the building.
• Materials used in new development shall reflect the historic palette of
downtown.
• A straightforward use of natural and traditional building materials Is
encouraged.
• Brick, stone, high quality metals, cast concrete, wood, and glass will
achieve the greatest level of compatibility with the surrounding area and
will best stand the test of time.
9 Fagade materials shall be high quality, authentic materials.
III
Oo 229
7. Design Buildings with Human Scale � -
Cities are large manmade environments, and while they provide
many necessities we have come to expect from our world, they are
still unnatural, designed places which can be horrific and unhealthy
as easily as they can be comfortable and appropriate.
Contemporary building materials are typically machine made rather
than handmade, and are frequently installed without alteration or
customization. Through this historical inevitability, recent buildings
inadvertently present this industrial reality as an aesthetic, deferring
to the industrial and eliminating evidence of human hands and craft.
However, the use of modern building materials does not condemn a
city to inhumaneness, as any materials may be used to create human
scale in a design. The same phenomenon of standardization has
exerted pressure on the form of buildings during this century.
Structural components are less costly when uniformly designed and
mass produced. Fortunately, the industry has seen innovations which
make non-standard parts less costly for a more appropriate
and humane consideration of the user.
The massing of new development should be compatible with the
existing development found on adjacent parcels. Bangor is
characterized by human scaled architecture that complements a
pleasant pedestrian environment. New construction downtown should
avoid large monolithic massing along all street frontages. Where new
structures are larger than adjacent buildings, horizontal and vertical
variation should be used to break large expanses of building into
components that are in scale with the context to which they most
closely relate.
The facade proportions used in new development should be
compatible with the existing development. While some buildings have
predominantly vertical or horizontal orientation, most use
architectural details and architectural features, such as window
openings and roof shapes to balance the proportions of facades into
pleasant and cohesive compositions.
06 2229
Values Supported Unique Character
Humane Character
GUIDELINES
• Buildings shall be designed with a variety of scales, creating a scale and
level of detail at the street level appropriate to the pedestrian.
• Clearly articulating different uses at lower building levels will aid in
creating a sense of human scale in mid- and high-rise buildings.
Addressing human scale may further be achieved through architectural
detailing, and by variation in the three dimensional character of the
building mass as It rises skyward. Monolithic, vertical r. ^msirns of a
maximum building footprint are strongly discouraged.
• The lower floors shall be differentiated architecturally.
• Where existing adjacent buildings have a consistent massing and roof
fors which enhance the character of the area, that massing and form
shall be reinforced unless it can be clearly demonstrated that an alternate
design would enhance the vitality of the area.
• Traditional arrangement of fagade components into base, middle, and top
composition shall be used to achieve compatibility and continuity within
the surrounding architectural context.
• The following features shall be considered as potential elements to help
break down building scale:
• Covered walkways, trellises or architectural awnings that
provide varying degrees of shade and sun at ground level.
• Distinct and multiple architectural roof forms, clearly
pronounced eaves, distinct parapet designs and cornice
treatments.
• Projecting bays, recessed balconies, and roof shape variation
shall be judiciously utilized to provide interest, individuality,
and appropriate scale to new structures.
• The design shall incorporate elements to visually screen elements such as
HVAC units, dumpsters loading areas. The integration of the screening of
those elements is encouraged over the addition of fencing and
landscaping which is not in harmony with the overall design.
Oo 2-29
S. Intensity of Site Use 1 38 - - I
Downtown is a special and limited space. Every opportunity must be
taken not to squander this precious real estate. Buildings should be
occupy as much of the lot area as possible. Buildings should be
multistory and multi use to the maximum extent possible. Pedestrian
oriented cities require that the scale of activity be compressed to
something much smaller and more intimate than one appropriate to
cars. In waterfront areas development parcels generally have been
created outside of areas for open space and views but in some
scenarios the incorporation of those open areas, views and public
connections will need to be incorporated into the design.
Values Supported Dense Urban Character
Unique Character
Humane Character
Economic Vitality
Sustainability
GUIDELINES
• Building heights shall be compatible with adjacent structures.
• Development shall strive for a Flour Area Ratio (FAR) of 2.0 or higher.
• Extensive use of lot area for single use on-site surface parking shall be
discouraged.
9. Integration with Overall Development Plan 06 229
Downtown areas should be laid out and planned to maximize the
public's full benefit of these spaces as both economic assets and
public amenities. Site developments should take extra care to
coordinate private and semi -private spaces within the context of the
greater adjacent public spaces. Historic and waterfront views and
vistas should be preserved. Connection and connectivity to
pedestrian walkways should be maintained.
Values Supported Sustainability
Human Character
Unique Character
Economic Vitality
GUIDELINES
• Outdoor spaces shall be designed to complement Meir surrounding
planned or existing public improvements.
• Roadways shall be Integrated with the existing terrain, limit through "Me
movements and discourage high speeds.
• New construction shall not block scenic or historic views and vistas.
• Building height and orientation shall be designed around the preservation
of scenic or historic views.
Fences shall be avoided which limit visual connectivity of public space and
views.
• Outdoor improvements shall maintain a similar Palette of construction
materials consistent with the style and quality of the public Improvements.
Bike racks are encouraged. Place racks at locations that do not
obstruct the Flow of pedestrians, are easily IdentiFlable, visible and
convenient to customer entrances.
Deciduous trees shall be used along the south side of buildings to
shade and cool in the summer but allow sun to passively warm the
building in the winter.
om
E fj 229
• Street trees shall be used through paved areas and along
pedestrian ways to provide shade and red" heat buildup and
glare at a minimum of one tree per 50 feet of frontage along a
roadway or walkway.
Utilities shall be located below ground.
10. Appropriate Lighting & Signage 06 229
Downtown is a pedestrian -oriented space, and as such the signage
and lighting design should not appear to imitate the mall or highway
commercial strip. If the streetscape offers cues to the use of
buildings, and is clearly defined as a human place, people may be
less frustrated living and working there. Signage need not be
designed to attract motorists passing by at high speeds; it can more
subtly invite people into offices, shops and restaurants. Lighting
downtown should provide for basic public safety but should be
utilized in a way that reflects that this is a residential community,
which allows for and human scale and privacy to have a place in
design,
Values Supported Humane Character
Civic Art
Sense of History
Dense Urban Character
Economic Vitality
Safety
GUIDELINES
• Site lighting, security lighting, and architectural/landscape lighting shall
provide the user with illumination levels appropriate for the designed
activity (i.e. parking, walking, outdoor dining).
• Site lighting shall shive to minimize glare.
• Exterior lighting shall take into account background lighting and lighting
from other sources to only provide the minimal amount of lighting needed.
• tight trespass beyond property lines shall be controlled by shielding or
aiming fixtures away from residential properties.
• Light poles and fixtures shall be in scale with proposed or surrounding
buildings. Consider using pedestrian scale lights in bollards (3 to 4 foot
high posts) where appropriate.
• All development shall use full cut off light fixtures for exterior lighting In 06 229
which no more than 2.5% of the total output is omitted at 90 degrees
from the vertical pole or building wall on which it Is mounted.
• Architectural & Landscape Lighting shall;
o Architectural lighting shall be used to highlight special features
only. Lighting expansive wall planes shall be avoided.
o Landscape feature lighting, and lighting at the pedestrian level is
encouraged.
• Signage shall strive to maintain the quality of materials used in the
downtown.
• Signage shall be scaled and illuminated for a pedestrian clientele.
• Unique signage is a formof civic art which shall be encouraged.
• Building -mounted signage shall be fully integrated with the design of the
building.
• Traditional corporate logos and mass produced signage shall be
discouraged.