![]() ![]() The form-based code treats the two halves as different places, preserving the storybook version of the Main Line while still allowing density near the train stations. Saffron explains:īecause Lower Merion was built around the Pennsylvania Railroad’s “Main Line,” it has always been a unique urban-suburban hybrid, with dense, transit-oriented villages like Ardmore and Bryn Mawr, and rolling country estates farther out in Gladwyne and Penn Valley that are totally car-dependent. It follows, then, that Lower Merion's new code is of the form-based variety. ![]() Lower Merio hired Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk, co-founder of the Congress for New Urbanism and Lower Merion native, to write the new zoning code. Saffron notes that Philadelphia has only just begun to tackle that issue. ![]() Accessory Dwelling Units will also be legalized by the new code. That seems like a full expression of the suburban status quo, but there is one visible sign of reform more in keeping with more recent planning trends: "Lower Merion is also going further than most of its peers to create pockets of density near transit and encourage walkability throughout the township," according to Saffron. Affordable housing and sustainable construction barely rate a mention." "The rules," writes Saffron, "enshrine some of the most cherished - and exclusionary - features of 1950s suburbia. Lower Merion's new zoning code will face a final vote by the Board of Commissioners on September 18. Inga Saffron writes of the new zoning code in the Philadelphia suburb of Lower Merion as an example of the "conflicted soul of the suburbs"-that is, the conflict between a contemporary push for more inclusionary land use regulations with the status quo of politics ruled by residential property owners. ![]()
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