Urban & Environmental Planning

Daphne SpainDepartment Chair

ABOUT THE DEPARTMENT

Students in the Planning program develop the understanding, sensitivity, and skills necessary to pursue professional careers in a variety of public, private, and nonprofit roles. The Department values environments where countrysides are productive and appropriately protected, where cities have vital centers and efficient means of movement, and where neighborhoods offer opportunities for all to live affordably and safely. The curriculum introduces students to the theories of planning, methods of analysis, effective means of communication, planning processes, and creative strategies for implementation. Choosing a Career In Urban Planning - the 28-page 2008 version of this brochure, is now posted here+ and can be viewed and printed.

One of the distinctive features of the program is a strong concern for community sustainability. While the topic is addressed in specific courses with that title, the concept of sustainability provides an underlying framework throughout the curriculum. Our goals are similar to those of the American Planning Association's Guide to Planning for Sustainability+. The title of our department is Urban and Environmental Planning. We believe it is necessary to consider both the urban and environmental aspects of a setting to address its issues, problems, and opportunities. We are as much concerned with the economy and issues of equity as we are with the environment, and find it more useful to emphasize linkages than distinctions. We hope to inspire our students to have the same enthusiasm we feel for addressing the planning needs of sustainable communities.

The Department is built on a distinguished faculty and excellent students. Many of the faculty are engaged in current professional and civic work in addition to pioneering research and publications. A number of part-time faculty who are active full-time professionals also contribute to the course offerings. The Institute for Environmental Negotiation+ works closely with the Department and frequently involves faculty and students in research projects.

DEGREES

The Department offers two degrees. In addition to a four-year Bachelor’s and a two-year Master’s of Urban and Environmental Planning, the Department offers a Minor for students throughout the University and a certificate in Historic Preservation. There are also a number of dual degree opportunities within the Master’s program.

The Institute for Environmental Negotiation (IEN)

Negotiation, mediation, and other interactive and collaborative problem solving approaches are increasingly important in planning, policy making and in the resolution of development controversies. The Institute for Environmental Negotiation+ of the Department of Urban and Environmental Planning is a major resource for the acquisition of these conflict resolution skills.

The Institute sponsors visiting mediation practitioners, offers courses in negotiation skills and public involvement, and provides training opportunities through internships. The Mediator+, newsletter of the institute, is also available online.

NEWS AND EVENTS
November 20, 2009

100-Mile Thanksgiving Featured on NPR's "With Good Reason"+

"With Good Reason invites you to a traditional Thanksgiving meal, but nearly everything on the table is grown, made, or brewed, within 100 miles of Charlottesville, Virginia. The dinner host, Tim Beatley (University of Virginia), introduced the 100-mile Thanksgiving idea to his students after reading 'The 100-mile Diet: A Year of Local Eating'...."

November 19, 2009

UVa Community Garden Featured on t.v.'s "Meet the Farmer"+

Meet the Farmer TV, a locally produced show that profiles food related projects, has recently completed an episode on the UVa Community Garden. You can view the episode at the link in the headline or watch it on Charlottesville local tv station 10 at 7pm each night this week (week of November 16, 2009). The film features three Urban and Environmental Planning program members: Ben Chrisinger, a fourth year student; Dana Smith, a second year graduate student; and Professor Tim Beatley.

November 14, 2009

Green Lands Students Welcome Public Feedback +

[From the News Leader] STAUNTON — The architecture students who strode through downtown Staunton and city parks in September returned on Thursday with sandwich boards singing the praises of the city's beauty and eco-friendliness, and offered some room for improvement. They invited the rest of town to join them. For the past two months, students from the U.Va. Green Lands class have been working to assess Staunton's existing green infrastructure, enhancing the city's Geographic Information Systems map, and compiling recommendations for the city. Halfway through compiling their plans to fix the place up, they hosted an open house at Bessie Weller Elementary to share their findings with the steering board of city officials, infrastructure experts and the dozens of city residents. [for complete article, follow link in headline]

October 23, 2009

Sustainable and Green Cities Are Focus of Film by Planning Professor Timothy Beatley+

{by Jane Ford, UVa News Services] For University of Virginia planning professor Timothy Beatley, cities are not just about buildings, roads and transportation. They are about building and sustaining community. An expert on sustainable and green cities, Beatley is the author of numerous books, including "Green Urbanism: Learning from European Cities," "Native to Nowhere: Sustaining Home and Community in a Global Age" and "The Ecology of Place: Planning for Environment, Economy, and Community," coauthored with Kristy Manning. Beatley recently turned to film to express his work. He collaborated with Boulder, Colo.-based filmmaker Chuck Davis to write and direct "The Nature of Cities," a one-hour exploration of nature found – and designed – within cities. "The Nature of Cities" will have a Richmond premiere on Oct. 29 at 4:30 p.m. at the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden's Massie Auditorium. The screening is free and open to the public, and is being shown as part of the symposium "Timeless Design in a Sustainable World: The Charles F. Gillette Forum." "'The Nature of Cities' is about the work of green urbanism," said Davis, who met Beatley in Sun Valley, Idaho, at a sustainability conference where they both presented their work. Davis had just completed a film about people working to face the challenges of climate change and was looking for a new project. After talking with Beatley, Davis was convinced he wanted to make a film exploring nature in urban spaces through projects that show how the built environment and nature can work together to sustain and rejuvenate life.

October 21, 2009

Faculty to be Featured in Sustainable World Symposium

Timeless Design in a Sustainable World+

TIMELESS DESIGN IN A SUSTAINABLE WORLD – at the Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden, Richmond Wed and Thurs, October 28-29. This two-day symposium will feature our own Thomas Woltz, ASLA, of Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architecture Firm, Charlottesville, VA as well as Douglas Reed, FASLA, of Reed Hilderbrand Associates, Watertown, MA. AND will showcase the Richmond premiere of Prof. Timothy Beatley’s documentary, The Nature of Cities. The cost for the event is $70 for Wednesday only ($35 for students); $95 for Thursday only ($48 for students); and $130 for both days ($65 for students). The fee includes dinner Wednesday and/or lunch Thursday. Event description: If one legacy of the 20th century is its architectural prowess, might the 21st century be devoted to developing exquisite green spaces between the buildings where we live, work, and play? All around the world, growing urban populations are seeking communal spaces—parks, squares, plazas, piazzas, greenways and gardens—as essential components of daily life, places of respite and reflection, recreation, and celebration. This symposium will examine timeless principles of design—whether applied to the creation of a residential garden or a public space—that connect us to the natural world and in so doing, fulfill man’s innate desire for association with other living things. The symposium honors the legacy of Charles F. Gillette, a leader in the field of landscape architecture, by engaging the public in a conversation about the importance of landscape design and the value of Gillette’s ideals of elegance, superb craftsmanship, and seamless blending of architecture and garden. For the itinerary and online registration visit the symposium's website.


<i>How Women Saved the City</i>; Daphne Spain

How Women Saved the City; Daphne Spain.

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