Traditional Neighborhood Development Partners, LLC


501 Washington St., Suite D, Durham NC, 27701
Office: (919) 680-2000 | Fax: (919) 680-2029

About New Urbanism

New Urbanism is an international movement to reform the design of the built environment, and is about raising our quality of life and standard of living by creating better places to live. New Urbanism is the revival of our lost art of place-making, and is essentially a re-ordering of the built environment into the form of complete cities, towns, villages, and neighborhoods – the way communities have been built for centuries around the world. New Urbanism involves fixing and infilling cities, as well as the creation of compact new towns and villages.

Resources on the Web

TND Partners works with clients and organizations that share the goals of New Urbanism and responsible urban development.

TND Partners’ approach to development is further illustrated in the following publications

New Urbanism Archetype

Courtesy Dover Kohl & Partners

Ten Principles of New Urbanism

  1. Walkability
  2. Connectivity
  3. Mixed-use & Diversity
  4. Mixed Housing
  5. Quality Architecture & Urban Design
  6. Traditional Neighborhood Structure
  7. Increased Density
  8. Smart Transportation
  9. Sustainability
  10. Quality Of Life
  1. Walkability

    • Most things within a 10-minute walk of home and work
    • Pedestrian friendly street design (buildings close to street; porches, windows & doors; tree-lined streets; on street parking; hidden parking lots; garages in rear lane; narrow, slow speed streets)
    • Pedestrian streets free of cars in special cases
  2. Connectivity

    • Interconnected street grid network disperses traffic & eases walking
    • A hierarchy of narrow streets, boulevards, and alleys
    • High quality pedestrian network and public realm makes walking pleasurable
  3. Mixed-Use & Diversity

    • A mix of shops, offices, apartments, and homes on site. Mixed-use within neighborhoods, within blocks, and within buildings
    • Diversity of people – of ages, classes, cultures, and races
  4. Mixed Housing

    A range of types, sizes and prices in closer proximity

  5. Quality Architecture & Urban Design

    Emphasis on beauty, aesthetics, human comfort, and creating a sense of place; Special placement of civic uses and sites within community. Human scale architecture & beautiful surroundings nourish the human spirit

  6. Traditional Neighborhood Structure

    • Discernable center and edge
    • Public space at center
    • Importance of quality public realm; public open space designed as civic art
    • Contains a range of uses and densities within 10-minute walk
    • Transect planning: Highest densities at town center; progressively less dense towards the edge. The transect is an analytical system that conceptualizes mutually reinforcing elements, creating a series of specific natural habitats and/or urban lifestyle settings. The Transect integrates environmental methodology for habitat assessment with zoning methodology for community design. The professional boundary between the natural and man-made disappears, enabling environmentalists to asses the design of the human habitat and the urbanists to support the viability of nature. This urban-to-rural transect hierarchy has appropriate building and street types for each area along the continuum.
  7. Increased Density

    • More buildings, residences, shops, and services closer together for ease of walking, to enable a more efficient use of services and resources, and to create a more convenient, enjoyable place to live.
    • New Urbanism design principles are applied at the full range of densities from small towns, to large cities
  8. Smart Transportation

    • A network of high-quality trains connecting cities, towns, and neighborhoods together
    • Pedestrian-friendly design that encourages a greater use of bicycles, rollerblades, scooters, and walking as daily transportation
  9. Sustainability

    • Minimal environmental impact of development and its operations
    • Eco-friendly technologies, respect for ecology and value of natural systems
    • Energy efficiency
    • Less use of finite fuels
    • More local production
    • More walking, less driving
  10. Quality of Life

    Taken together these add up to a high quality of life well worth living, and create places that enrich, uplift, and inspire the human spirit.

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