The Neighborhood Unit PDF
The Neighborhood Unit PDF
The Neighborhood Unit PDF
URBAN PLANNING
Neighborhood
Unit
PREPARED BY
Amrutha S R, Ananya M S, Anusha Ashok, Ashritha K, Sriprabha S
CONTENTS
The neighborhood as a unit is a ubiquitous phenomenon in every urban and non urban
area. Arnold Whittick (1974) describes neighborhood unit as an integrated, and planned
urban area related to the larger community of which it is a part, and consisting of
residential districts, a school or schools, shopping facilities, religious buildings, open
spaces, and perhaps a degree of service industry.
01
EVOLUTION AND CONCEPTUALIZATION
OF
THE NEIGHBORHOOD UNIT
The ‘neighborhood unit’ as a planning concept evolved in response to the degenerated
environmental and social conditions fostered as a consequence of industrial revolution in
the early 1900s. One of the earliest authors to attempt a definition of the ‘neighborhood
unit’ in fairly specific terms was Clarence Arthur Perry (1872-1944), a New York planner.
Perry’s neighborhood unit concept began as a means of insulating the community from
the ill-effects of burgeoning sea of vehicular traffic. However, it evolved to serve a much
broader purpose of providing a discernible identity for the concept of the neighborhood,
and of offering to designers a framework for disseminating the city into smaller subareas.
While the origin of the concept of the neighborhood unit may be cited at an early date, it
was the publication of Clarence A. Perry’s memorandum entitled ‘The Neighborhood Unit’
in the 1929 ‘Regional Plan of New York and Its Environs’, which led to its promotion as a
planning tool. Perry’s monograph offered in concrete terms a diagrammatic model of the
ideal layout for a neighborhood of a specified population size. This model provided
specific guidelines for the spatial distribution of residences, community services, streets
and businesses.
02
PERRY’S CONCEPTION
OF
THE NEIGHBORHOOD UNIT
Perry described the neighborhood unit as that populated area which would require and
support an elementary school with an enrolment of between 1,000 and 1,200 pupils. This
would mean a population of between 5,000 and 6,000 people. Developed as a low density
dwelling district with a population of 10 families per acre, the neighborhood unit would
occupy about 160 acres and have a shape which would render it unnecessary for any
child to walk a distance of more than one-quarter mile to school. About 10 percent of the
area would be allocated to recreation, and through traffic arteries would be confined to
the surrounding streets, internal streets being limited to service access for residents of
the neighborhood. The unit would be served by shopping facilities, churches, and a
library, and a community center, the latter being located in conjunction with the school
(Gallion, 1984).
03
THE NEIGHBORHOOD UNIT
The above title is the name which, to facilitate discussion, has been given to the scheme of
arrangement for a family-life community that has evolved as the main conclusion of this
study. Our investigations showed that residential communities, when they meet the universal
needs of family life. have similar parts performing similar functions. In the neighborhood unit
system those parts have been put together as an organic whole. The scheme is put forward as
the framework of a model community and not as a detailed plan. Its actual realization in an
individual real-estate development requires the embodiment and ligature which can be given
to it only by the planner;· the architect. and the builder.
The underlying principle of the scheme is that an urban neighborhood should be regarded both
as a unit of a larger whole and as a distinct entity in itself. For government. fire and police
protection, and many other services. it depends upon the municipality. Its residents, for the
most part. find their occupations outside or the neighborhood. To invest in bonds, attend the
opera or visit the museum, perhaps even to buy a piano, they have to resort to the "downtown"
district. But there are certain other facilities, functions or aspects which are strictly local and
peculiar to a well-arranged · credential community. They may be classified under four heads:
(1) the elementary school,
(2) small parks and playgrounds,
(3) local shops, and
(4) residential environment.
Other neighborhood institutions and services are sometimes found, but these are practically
universal
Neighborhood-unit principles
1. Size - A residential unit development should provide housing for that population for which
one elementary school is ordinarily required, its actual area depending upon population
density.
2. Boundaries - The unit should be bounded on all sides by arterial streets, sufficiently wide to
facilitate its by-passing by all through traffic.
3. Open Spaces - A system of small parks and recreation spaces, planned to meet the needs of
the particular neighborhood. should be provided.
4. Institution Sites - Sites for the school and other institutions having service spheres
coinciding with the limits of the unit should be suitably grouped about a central point or
common area.
5. Local Shops - One or more shopping districts, adequate for the population to be served,
should be laid out in the circumference of the unit, preferably at traffic junctions and adjacent
to similar districts of adjoining neighborhoods.
6. Internal Street System -The unit should be provided with a special street system, each
highway being proportioned to its probable traffic load, and the street net as a whole being
designed to facilitate circulation within the unit and to discourage its use by through traffic.
04
SIZE
The town is divided into self-contained units or sectors of population.
This is further divided into smaller units called neighborhood with 2,000 to
5,000 based on the requirement of one primary
05
BOUNDARIES
Residents enjoy many intangible benefits living in a neighborhood.
06
OPEN SPACES
The parks, playgrounds, small greens and circles in the tract total 17 acres, or 10.6
per cent of the total area.
If there is included also the l. 2 acres of market squares. the total acreage of open
space is 18.2 acres.
This serves both as a park and as a setting or approach to the school building.
Back of the school is the main playground for the small children, of 2.54 acres.
Space for tennis courts is located conveniently in another section of the district.
At various other points are to be found parked ovals or small greens which give
attractiveness to vistas and afford pleasing bits of landscaping for the
surrounding homes.
07
INTERNAL STREETS
In carrying out the unit principle, the boundary streets have been made
sufficiently wide to serve as main traffic arteries. One of the bounding streets is
160 feet wide, and the other three have widths of 120 feet.
Each of these arterial highways is provided with a central roadway for through
traffic and two service roadways for local traffic separated by planting strips. One-
half of the area of the boundary streets is contributed by the development.
The interior streets are generally 40 or 50 feet in width and are adequate for the
amount of traffic. which will be developed in a neighborhood of this single- family
density. By the careful design of blocks. the area devoted to streets is rather lower
than is usually found in a standard gridiron subdivision.
If the bounding streets were not over 50 feet wide, the per cent of the total street
area would be reduced from the 27.4 per cent to about 22 per cent.
A graded street system was central to Perry's plan. Streets would serve two
different groups: people passing by the neighborhood unit and the residents
themselves. Perry placed arterial along which through traffic could move rapidly
at the boundaries of the neighborhood unit. Unless there were (expensive) bridges
or tunnels, Perry knew it would be dangerous for children to cross highways to get
from home to school so he opposed arterial between residences and schools.
Residential streets, designed primarily for use by neighborhood unit residents ·
would be in the interior.
08
LOCAL SHOPS
Small shopping districts are located at each of the four comers of the
development.
The streets furnishing access to the stores are widened to provide for
parking. and at the two more important points there are small market
squares. which afford additional parking space and more opportunity for
unloading space in the rear of the stores.
The total area devoted to business blocks and market plazas amounts to 7.
7 acres. The average business frontage per family provided by the plan is
about 2.3 feet.
09
LAYOUT OF BUILDINGS
COMMUNITY CENTERS
The pivotal feature of the layout is the
common, with the group of buildings,
which fac e upon it. These consist of the
schoolhouse and two lateral structures
facing a small central plaza.
10
Neighborhood Conception by Others
The concept propagated by Clarence A. Perry was carried forward by several others with certain
variations or elaborations. For example, N.L. Engelhardt, Jr. presented a comprehensive pattern of the
neighborhood units grouped in relation to the various levels of school facilities. He proposed a radius
of ½ mile as maximum walking distance to the elementary school. Playgrounds and nursery schools
are proposed with a radius of ¼ mile walking distance for the families in the neighborhood.
Clarence Stein placed the elementary school at the center of the neighborhood unit and within ¼
mile radius of all residents. A small shopping center for daily needs is located near the school. Most
residential streets are suggested as cul-de-sac or ‘dead-end’ roads to eliminate through traffic, and
park space flows through the neighborhood in a manner reminiscent of the Radburn Plan. He further
expanded the definition of neighborhood center by connecting the neighborhoods together to create
towns. The diagram shows the grouping of three neighborhood units served by a high school and one
or two major commercial centers, the radius for walking distance to these facilities being one mile.
The neighborhood unit has been defined and redefined throughout the planning history. Despite
several variations, the principle of neighborhood unit runs through all considerations for social,
physical and political organization of the city. It represents a unit of the population with basic
common needs for educational, recreational and other service facilities, and it is the standard for
these facilities from which the size and design of the neighborhood emerge.
The concept of neighborhood unit in traditional built environments and rural settlements constituted
a strong sense of attachment, identity, admittance and belonging for inhabitants. The close proximity
of most of the community services and businesses to the residences enhanced social interactions.
Neighborhood feeling in contemporary urban environments, however, is less dependent on the
sharing of common close physical residential environment. Impact of urbanization, rise of mass
society, modernization, improved inter connectivity and the consequent increased socio-spatial
mobility in the neighborhood has been highly destructive. Increasing mobility and transportation
facilities have opened up new possibilities, thereby disregarding the benefits expected of a
neighborhood. Remote activities and changed lifestyles of dwelling occupants thus become the basic
factors that shape the social environment (Berk, 2005). This issue causes segregation of the social
environment from the immediate physical environment.
It is not misleading to accuse public and private housing initiatives driven by neo-liberal or random
land use options solely targeting financial viability and profitability of the current status of housing.
Most of the current housing approaches concentrate on the physical attributes of single dwelling
units and exclude the fact that the dwelling units rarely stand alone in a given physical space. The
high-rise settlement blocks with inadequately planned physical environment characterize most of
the contemporary developments. This however does not diminish the importance of the
neighborhood unit.
The end objective of most planning programs is to achieve certain social objectives. The primary
objectives addressed in planning programs are healthy and secure communities. An effective
consideration for the settlements in that case would be to attempt unifying the social and physical
environment of residents.
CONCLUSION
Neighbourhoods form the urban tissue of the city both physically and socially. The concept of the
neighborhood is well established as a basic unit of planning the cities. Further, it is a popular and
accepted element of social and physical organization in the minds of most people. Hence the
neighborhood has become the symbol and the means to preserve the socio-cultural values of an
earlier less harried way of life in our increasingly complex and fast moving urban centers. This also
causes enhancement in the social-cultural bonds that would result as a direct outcome of
improvement in physical conditions of a neighborhood.
"The Neighborhood Unit" from The Regional Plan of New York and its Environs
(1929) Clarence Perry