Visual Enhancement of Zoning Bylaws
by Michael von Hausen & Gloria Venczel

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An important challenge facing planners is to ensure that local zoning ordinances can be readily understood by applicants and the general public. One interesting approach, as explained by Michael von Hausen and Gloria Venczel, is to add illustrations to help explain the ordinance's requirements.


From PCJ #49, Winter 2003
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  • typical illustration used in New Westminster, BC
    Michael von Hausen and Gloria Venczel discuss how the city of New Westminster, BC, went about illustrating its zoning bylaws.

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    An important, but often overlooked, challenge facing planners is to ensure that their community's zoning bylaws or ordinances can be readily understood by applicants and by the general public. At the same time, zoning bylaws must be detailed and thorough enough to cover a multitude of situations, and must be capable of being effectively enforced. As most planners come to realize, in trying to balance the need for simplicity and comprehensiveness, zoning bylaws present a quite demanding form of communication. Compounding the problem is that fact that many communities include a growing number of immigrants and residents whose second language is English.

    One way to deal effectively with this challenge is to add illustrations to the zoning bylaw without changing the wording of the provisions themselves. A related option is to supplement the zoning ordinance with public information bulletins that can both illustrate and explain various sections of the ordinance.

    This article will explore both of these techniques through the experience gained in the recent zoning bylaw graphic enhancement process for the City of New Westminster in British Columbia. ...

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