| Here are the original 18
goals of the Wilshire Center/Koreatown Redevelopment
Area passed by the City Council in 1995. Getting to
know these goals in greater depth will be helpful as
we begin to envision and plan more for the next five
years.
WILSHIRE CENTER/KOREATOWN REDEVELOPMENT AREA
PROJECT GOALS
1. Eliminate and prevent the spread of blight and deterioration
in accordance with the Redevelopment Plan.
2. Encourage the involvement and participation of property
owners, residents, business persons, religious and community
organizations to meet the diverse needs.
3. Promote the economic, social, educational and cultural
and physical well-being through the revitalization of
the residential, commercial and industrial areas.
4. Promote the livability of the Project Area as a cohesive
and sustainable neighborhood.
5. Encourage the development of housing in a wide range
of types, prices, rent levels and ownership options.
6. Enhance the safety and security of residents, businesses,
employees and visitors.
7. Encourage the employment of Project Area residents
[in the Project Area].
8. Promote educational and job training opportunities
for Project Area residents by working with the LAUSD,
public and private employers and institutions.
9. Provide for an efficient circulation system coordinated
with land uses and densities and adequate to accommodate
traffic. Also, encourage improvement of public transit
services in coordination with other public transportation.
10. Promote programs that recognize and support the
diverse cultures.
11. Provide additional open space and recreational activities
and facilities.
12. Enhance and beautify the major thoroughfares, particularly
the north/south streets that link the freeways.
13. Promote and encourage artists, crafts people and
entertainers to live and work within the Project Area.
14. Develop a cultural and entertainment district to
establish a regional identity for a significant commercial,
retail, and residential center.
15. Preserve historical buildings and monuments, where
feasible.
16. Establish sign standards and controls to avoid clutter
and communicate a sense of hospitality.
17. Coordinate the revitalization efforts and take advantage
of other programs in the City of Los Angeles and other
local, state and federal agencies.
18. Promote and encourage the development of bicycle-friendly
streets and a full range of amenities, where feasible.
Below Are Additional Thoughts
By Gary Russell, AIA, Chair of Urban Design Committee
The following comments may help move the redevelopment
process forward and represent the interest of the Community.
Using the 1994 original 18 goals should be a foundation
to build our future. At the same time that we ask the
City to fill the potholes, solve the traffic congestion,
deal with the details, and yes, solving one problem
at a time is important but we need to also begin the
remaking our community, making of our future, looking
at the big picture and the interconnections of the details
and problems. We need to start thinking big, creating
the vision for our future.
"…must have a vision for the future and
a plan for getting us there." Councilmember Antonio
Villaraigosa,
"…shared vision that provides a strategic
framework for imagining, analyzing, judging, and implementing
each step along the way." Urban Land Institute
"Reaching a shared vision requires facing the
tough questions upfront, making sure everyone understands
the realities of the situation, and setting short-,
medium-,and long-range goals that are realistically
attainable." Urban Land Institute
"Why Vision? Size and significance are not automatic
guarantees of continued prosperity. There is great power
here to achieve a more sustainable community and more
livable community as part of it if we can align our
energies in support of a commonly shared vision. The
key is to understand what this Community would look
like and how it would function if a set of growth principles
were to be broadly applied in shaping the future. If
a desirable outcome can be defined, then the steps to
get there can be embraced by any public or private agent
of change who endorses the vision." Southern California
Association of Government
So, how do we begin to act in concert within the community
in creating a Vision? We start by exercising leadership.
CAC has stepped forward to begin the process by approving
a "Vision and Strategy Discussion" program
last spring. We then use the structure of key "players"
to explore the possibilities and develop the necessary
information. We need to proceed wisely; to benefit from
the experience of others while acknowledging our special
community characteristics and challenges. With the principles
(the 18 goals) originally stated in 1995 by the CAC
we move to look at expanding, refining and debating
and applying in different combinations in scenarios
for the Community's future. We now have a set of principles/goals
to use, through the work of the Vision and Strategy
Discussion process. An element of the process is to
refine the Principles/Goals through a series of "feedback
loops" between CAC and the other community stakeholders.
At the same time, growth related data will be compiled
and put in a form that can be easily understood. With
this in hand we investigate the issues and recommend
ways to achieve our aspirations. Then we state the Vision
for our community. This allows us to go on to the second
step
Step two, the framework, is a list of goals; objectives
and policies that will help people make the community
vision a reality. We have a beginning with the existing
18 goals. We need to include agreement on the things
we all value in our community and believe are important
to preserve and protect. It will not only document these
values, it will provide recommendations on the things
we can do if we want to change our future. Then we move
on to the third step.
Step three, the action plan, the strategy, is a detailed
list of specific tasks that must be carried out in order
to achieve the objectives that have been agreed upon
in the framework. The action plan will provide citizens,
government, and neighborhood and community groups with
specific direction regarding things they can and need
to do in order to make the vision a reality. The action
plan will also provide the basis for evaluating our
progress in achieving the vision. The fourth step then
follows.
Step four, the benchmarks, is specific "measurements"
that describe important characteristics of our community.
For instance, the average duration of a commute to work,
the average amount of open space area per person, average
family income, or number of years of school attained
is all examples of benchmarks. Taken together, these
can provide a picture of our community's "health"
at a given point in time. From that point forward, they
can be used to gauge if our community's health is getting
better, worse, or staying the same.
Creating a shared vision and strategy which is created
by the community stakeholders, we get a plan that the
community stakeholders can buy into that is a living
plan and not another document that sits on the shelf.
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