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| #e.23847 | Friday 8:30AM to 10:30AM August 23,
2013 | CM | 2.00 |
2013 Speaker Series - Broadway VisionAPA California Chapter, Sacramento Valley SectionSacramento, CA Webster defines resilience as “an ability to recover from or adjust easily to change.” Communities, with the assistance of design professionals, must constantly seek ways to adjust to new economic realities, changing demographics, diminishing resources, and the need for climate adaptation. With signs of economic recovery on the horizon, the Sacramento Valley Region needs to be well-poised to recover in a more sustainable, healthier, smarter, and economic-friendly manner. In year six of the Sacramento Valley American Planning Association’s Speaker Series, we will join with our partners to focus on a variety of cutting edge tools and strategies to shape our future and adjust to changes.
ULI Sacramento and the Greater Broadway Partnership organized an active outreach effort, including community forums and public workshops, that served as a guiding road map and investment strategy for successful economic revitalization within the Broadway corridor. Following the presentation on Broadway, a panel of academic, federal and state partners will discuss how the Broadway effort and other State placemaking efforts are contributing to the development of more resilient communities. The focus will be on interconnections between people and place strategies and how small scale efforts can impact the broader dynamics of regions and communities.
More Instructors: Mike Notestine Mr. Notestine has over 25 years of extensive experience in all aspects of planning including general plans, specific plans, and regional and community plans. His expertise includes developing revitalization strategies and design guidelines for strategies for downtown communities in California’s North Coast, South Coast, Central Valley, Foothill, and Sierra regions. A substantial amount of Mr. Notestine’s work involves preserving and enhancing communities whose historic downtown areas and commercial corridors are facing economic pressure from commercial development away from the city center. He has worked on creating plans that encourage appropriate commercial and residential development for these areas.
Mr. Notestine is also an expert in economic development, historic preservation, urban design and encouraging community participation through workshops and charrettes. He has been an advocate for infill development and has been instrumental in the development of policies, plans, and strategies that encourage pedestrian-friendly and transit supportive communities.
In addition, Mr. Notestine is well informed on the myriad of funding sources, both government and private, available for revitalization efforts, and has frequently helped clients identify additional funding sources applicable to their projects.
Bachelor of Science
Environmental Planning and Management, Concentration in Urban Planning; University of California, Davis, 1978
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