Design Review Program
Applicant's Toolbox: Design Guidelines
Multifamily and Commercial Buildings | Downtown Development | Neighborhood-Specific Design Guidelines
Design Review Guidelines for Multifamily and Commercial Buildings
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Guideline D-2: Blank Walls |
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Buildings should avoid large blank walls facing the street, especially near sidewalks. Where blank walls are unavoidable they should receive design treatment to increase pedestrian comfort and interest. |
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Explanation and Examples A wall may be considered "large" if it has a blank surface substantially greater in size than similar walls of neighboring buildings. Blank walls provide opportunities for defacement with graffiti.
The following examples are possible methods for treating blank walls:
- installing vertical trellis in front of the wall with climbing vines or plants materials
- setting the wall back and providing a landscaped or raied planter bed in front of the wall, including plant materials that could grow to obscure or screen the wall's surface
- providing art (mosaic, mural, decorative masonry pattern, sculpture, relief, etc.) over a substantial portion of the blank wall surface
- employing small setbacks, indentations, or other means of breaking up the wall's surface
- providing special lighting, a canopy, horizontal trellis or other pedestrian-oriented features that break up the size of the blank wall's surface and add visual interest
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<previous D-1 Pedestrian Open Spaces and Entrances |
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next> D-3 Retaining Walls |
Last Updated: December 24, 2004