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COSTS OF
SPRAWL 2000 |
TCRP REPORT 74
Robert W. Burchell et al.
Newspapers headline the proliferation of sprawl
almost daily. What is sprawl? The preface to this landmark study
defines it as ?pread-out development that consumes significant amounts
of natural and man-made resources, including land and public works
infrastructure of various types?and ?ow-density, leapfrog development
that is characterized by unlimited outward extension.?Can sprawl
be controlled, or should it be? Are its consequences always negative?
TCRP Report 74 is the culmination of more than
five years of Rutgers University?ed research on urban sprawl in
America. This comprehensive study, prepared for the Transportation
Research Board, calculates the costs of sprawl over a 25-year future
from 2000 to 2025 for the 3,091 counties in the United States. It
projects the quantitative and qualitative costs of an uncontrolled
growth future based on historical development patterns and compares
that future to one that emphasizes more-contained development--smart
for compact growth--over the same 25-year period.
The report? sixteen chapters are divided into four
parts: Setting the Scene (background and historical context of sprawl);
The Impact of Sprawl on Resources (impacts on land, water and sewer,
roads, public service costs, real estate development); The Personal
Costs of Sprawl (impacts on individual travel costs--automobile
and transit, quality of life, the livability of cities); and Dealing
with Sprawl (both the benefits and the negative effects of sprawl).
The study? findings are critical to public and
private decision makers across the United States as they attempt
to balance sensible land development with economic growth goals.
619 pp.
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