One-size-fits-all neighborhoods are a blueprint for development failure, C3KC panel says

March 11, 2022  |  Blythe Dorrian and Tommy Felts

Panelists Kavya Shankar, Sam De Jong, and Jacob Wagner at the C3KC "Future of Neighborhoods" session

Editor’s note: Startland News is a non-financial media sponsor of the 3CKC conference organized by the Junior League of Kansas City, Missouri.

The formula for creating a vibrant neighborhood might seem simple, but replicating it between variable demographics, geographies and economies is more challenging than many planners think, said Kavya Shankar.

“The strength of the neighborhood is made up of the residents,” said Shankar, COO and co-founder of Trust Neighborhoods, during a “Future of Neighborhoods” session at Tuesday’s C3KC conference at Union Station

Among the elements contributing most to that strength: mixed income, diversity, easy access to amenities, good schools, and social ties, she said.

“If everyone is the same, we have a problem,” fellow panelist Jacob Wagner added.

Moderator Phyllis Hardwick and panelist Kavya Shankar embrace at the C3KC "Future of Neighborhoods" session

Moderator Phyllis Hardwick and panelist Kavya Shankar embrace at the C3KC “Future of Neighborhoods” session

Moderator Phyllis Hardwick — executive director at Community Capital Fund — led Shankar, Wagner, an associate professor of Urban Planning and Design at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, and Sam De Jong, a project architect for BNIM, in a conversation about how such factors as equity and health, development, appraisals, and zoning can reshape a city, street corner by street corner.

“Neighborhood work is complex and evolving,” Hardwick said.

But a common thread emerged throughout the discussion: the importance of multifaceted diversity in creating place.

“Space provides a variety of options for people,” De Jong said. “A variety of housing types makes a strong neighborhood. Not just single family homes for sale or multi-family for rent.”

Panelists acknowledged the challenges that come with building smaller, diverse housing units for people. Gaps with income, housing, and transportation increase the difficulty in getting financial, civic and community buy-in.

But that doesn’t make the work any less critical, Wagner said.

“If you only build one kind of housing at one price point, you will only have one kind of family who can afford to be in that neighborhood,” he said.

Denesha Snell, American Public Square, asks panelists a question at the C3KC "Future of Neighborhoods" session

Denesha Snell, American Public Square, asks panelists a question at the C3KC “Future of Neighborhoods” session

Moves to abolish limitations like zoning for single family homes aren’t the answer, panelists agreed, since specific zoning rules actually work for some neighborhoods — and one-size-fits-all approaches are doomed to fail because they don’t take individual neighborhoods’ unique needs into account.

Zoning modifications within communities may be a necessary tool for neighborhoods, but they also can be wielded as a weapon by those who have different motivations than current residents, Wagner said, noting the threat of gentrification through development that does not run parallel to community needs.

Audience members at the C3KC "Future of Neighborhoods" session

Audience members at the C3KC “Future of Neighborhoods” session

Development — a critical aspect of urban planning, Wanger said — doesn’t have to be a negative, especially when communities and their residents join in the process, Shankar said.

“They should not just have input, but control and power,” she said.

“Working with developers needs to go beyond engagement,” Shankar continued. “It can’t just be a meeting where everyone tries to get their opinion out in one conversation.”

Developers frequently have an upper hand in reshaping neighborhoods because of their financial backing and familiarity with the planning process, Wagner said. Greater leadership from banks and architects could help upset that balance of power, he added.

“We have to meet people where they are,” Wagner said. “We have to work with the neighborhoods we have, and we need to work to build strong places to build equity.”

The 3CKC event was organized by the Junior League of Kansas City, Missouri.

Click here to learn more about the sessions Tuesday at Union Station.

This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.

For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2022 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Cherry catches history with new Chiefs playoff collection — a first for a female designer

    By Tommy Felts | January 14, 2025

    An exclusive apparel collection from the Chiefs and fashion-forward brand Cherry is taking the field ahead of Kansas City’s latest playoff appearance. And the woman wearing the cherry-red captain’s patch: a familiar face within Kansas City sports and entrepreneurship. “This collaboration means the world to me,” said Thalia Cherry, who founded Cherry Co. in 2012.…

    Score a high-end ‘Kingdom Coat’ in time for KC’s love story with the Chiefs; popup sews in fashion designer’s own lifelong fandom

    By Tommy Felts | January 10, 2025

    Kansas City fashion designer Christian Michael Shuster’s latest collection is skipping the runway and hitting the gridiron, he shared. The lead designer and president of the christianMICHAEL fashion label — known for his outerwear and signature diamond-quilted fabric — has kicked off his “Kingdom Coats” collection just in time for the NFL playoffs and the…

    Mildred’s new South Plaza spot serves brothers opportunity to scale brand’s cozy legacy

    By Tommy Felts | January 9, 2025

    It already has one of downtown Kansas City’s best breakfast sandwiches. Now Mildred’s is opening another home-spun spot in the South Plaza neighborhood. Mildred’s — a breakfast, brunch and lunch operation with locations downtown and in the Crossroads — plans a 7 a.m. Friday opening at 5060 Main St., in the former Mission Taco Joint…

    Irish favorite won’t reopen after chef’s killing; Brady & Fox could never be replicated, building owner says

    By Tommy Felts | January 9, 2025

    The restaurant space previously home to East Brookside’s Brady & Fox is now available for lease, its owner confirmed, noting the building has been dark since the shooting death of beloved Kansas City chef Shaun Brady, a steadfast leader within the local Irish community. “We’ve been working with the family and we have all agreed…