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Helping Make Downtown Fort Lauderdale More Connected, Sustainable, and Walkable
ULI Advisory Services panelists spent a week in October evaluating connectivity, parks, and open spaces in Fort Lauderdale's urban core.
ULI panel provides strategic recommendations on design guidelines, funding opportunities, policy approaches, and an implementation plan to bolster the resilience of Miami’s urban waterfront.
Through a partnership between the City of Miami and the Miami Downtown Development Authority (DDA), Miami convened a panel of 10 experts from the Urban Land Institute in June to study climate-related threats and potential solutions within the city’s urban core.
The panel focused on strengthening the Biscayne Bay waterfront as Downtown Miami’s first line of defense against rising seas, transforming the Miami River into a mixed-use district that bridges the gap between the water and surrounding neighborhoods such as Little Havana and Allapattah, and incentivizing responsible development along an inland ridge of high-lying ground.
“The Urban Land Institute’s preliminary findings provide us with a roadmap for enacting design, infrastructure, zoning and financing strategies that will ensure Miami sustains its growth as a world-class city – not for years, not for generations, but forever,” said City of Miami Commission Chairman Ken Russel, who also chairs the Miami DDA.
In June 2019, ULI was asked by the City of Miami and the Miami Downtown Development Authority to provide recommendations for addressing waterfront resilience and mitigating the effects of sea level rise in Downtown Miami – primarily along Biscayne Bay and the Miami River. The panel was tasked with focusing on four key areas: design, finance, policy, and implementation.
The panel came up with strategic recommendations that take a holistic approach to resilience for the urban waterfront with specific recommendations around waterfront design guidelines, infrastructure finance, community engagement, and leveraging past plans and studies into actions moving forward.
Following is a summary of the panel’s recommendations:
A video recording of the panel’s presentation at Miami City Hall on June 7, 2019 is available online.
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