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Ilter, D and Dikbas, A (2009) An analysis of the key challenges to the widespread use of mediation in the Turkish construction industry. International Journal of Law in the Built Environment, 1(02), 143-55.

Pedro, J B, Meijer, F and Visscher, H (2009) The Portuguese building regulation system: a critical review. International Journal of Law in the Built Environment, 1(02), 156-71.

Sherry, C (2009) The New South Wales strata and Community Titles Acts: A case study of legislatively created high rise and master planned communities. International Journal of Law in the Built Environment, 1(02), 130-42.

Ziegler, E H (2009) The case for megapolitan growth management in the twenty-first century: Regional urban planning and sustainable development in the USA. International Journal of Law in the Built Environment, 1(02), 105-29.

  • Type: Journal Article
  • Keywords: cars; cities; sustainable development; town planning; USA
  • ISBN/ISSN: 1756-1450
  • URL: https://doi.org/10.1108/17561450910974722
  • Abstract:

    The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate significant problems in the US’ development pattern of regional automobile-dependent sprawl and local growth management and to make suggestions about adopting a regional growth management model that might better provide for more sustainable development of the built environment. This paper reviews trends in the USA and elsewhere to determine the negative effects of the current system of sprawl and the potential benefits of developing higher-density urban centers. The paper also looks to models in some US cities and Europe to further analyse potential legal and political issues related to this type of regional sustainable development. Unsustainable, automobile-dependent regional sprawl is a result of local zoning, growth management, and parking programs and has negative effects both now and for the future. The result has been more time, money, and resources wasted in automobile transit instead of new planning models that would lead to a more sustainable and less automobile-dependent future. A metropolitan sustainable development governing framework for growth management in the twenty-first century is essential for a sustainable future. This includes higher-density urban centres, transit-oriented development centres, and a change in public attitude away from "not in my back yard" thinking. This paper provides the potential benefits of creating a metropolitan governing framework to identify and regulate "growth areas" in a region. It further demonstrates how linking these areas to regional transit planning will help achieve the development of higher-density, mixed use, and intensive urban core job/housing areas where people could live, work, shop, and play without the use of the automobile.