Site Analysis 101, Include Pedestrians/Cyclists
Developers, architects, engineers and politicians in the St. Louis region must collectively assume that 100% of the population drives their own private vehicle on 100% of their daily trips. They must, how else can you explain what passes for new development in the region? Only development that will remain more than a mile from the nearest structure need not worry about pedestrian access to the site. Anything closer than 1/4 mile should assume that some users will approach by a mode other private automobile.
One of my first classes in architecture school, in the mid-1980s, was site analysis. I still have my text from that class; Site Analysis: Diagramming Information for Architectural Design by Edward T. White, 1983. Note that the Americans with Disabilities Act did not become law until 1990.
“We should always remember that a site is never inert but is an ongoing set of very active networks that are intertwined in a complex relationship.”
White suggests a “consequence triangle” as “a convenient model for understanding the network of contextual causes and effects and how they relate to other aspects and issues of our project.” The triangle includes the building, users and context.
The factors White listed to consider, collect data on, and to diagram, are:
- Location
- Neighborhood Context – 3-4 blocks adjacent to site, existing & projected uses
- Size and Zoning – dimensional aspects of site, current and projected zoning trends
- Legal
- Natural Physical Features
- Man-Made Features
- Circulation – pedestrian & vehicular movement — quoted below.
- Utilities
- Sensory
- Human and Cultural
- Climate
Neighborhood Context:
Presents the immediate surroundings of the site for perhaps three to four blocks beyond the site boundary. This may be extended further to an important factor or because of the scale of the project. Map may show existing and projected uses, buildings, zoning and any other conditions that may have an impact on our project.
Size and Zoning:
Documents all the dimensional aspects of the site including boundaries, location and dimensions of easements and present zoning classification with all its dimensional implications (setbacks, height restrictions, parking formulas, allowed uses, etc.) and buildable area (land available for the project after all setbacks have been subtracted). Analysis should also document the present and projected zoning trends, plans by the city transportation department to widen roads (change rights of way) and any further trend that might affect our project in the future.
Circulation:
Presents all vehicular and pedestrian movement patterns on and around the site. Data includes duration and peak loads for surrounding vehicular traffic and pedestrian movement, bus stops, site access edges, traffic generators, service truck access and intermittent traffic (parades, fire truck routes, concerts at nearby auditorium). Traffic analysis should include future projections insofar as they can be made.
Clearly some of the above are dated — seldom do cities increase the width of the public right of way these days. In places with modern zoning (not St. Louis), the urban site will have build-to lines rather than setbacks, minimum heights rather than maximums, bike parking requirements and so on. The circulation part is still valid. Vehicles include bicycles and motor scooters. Pedestrians include the able-bodied as well as those with disabilities (physical, sight, hearing, etc). The pedestrian part is what is so clearly overlooked by the professionals designing many recent projects.
They may say nobody walks in the area of their project yet a bus stop is on the edge of the site. If you have a bus stop within a 1/4 mile you’ve got pedestrians. I’ve been so many places in our region where it seems like nobody walks at all but if you stick around long enough pedestrians begin to come from all directions. They gather and shortly a bus appears, picking them up and dropping off others. Those that just left the bus go in all directions.
It is not just about bus stops either. Unless you are isolated in the middle of nowhere you have others around you.  Most will choose to drive to their destination but given the choice some will choose to walk (or bike). Designing places in such a way that a car is mandatory is just not how I was educated. These concepts are freshman level but forgotten by many.  We need to remind them to consider all means of accessing sites.
– Steve Patterson