CityCraft and EcoDistricts Begin Strategic Partnership

It’s been a while since I’ve posted here on this blog.  We’ve been busy at CityCraft Ventures and I just hit my one year mark at the organization.  Time flies when you’re having fun!  We’ve been working on some exciting projects and I’ll be sharing more in the coming months.  Looking forward to blogging a little more.  There is no shortage of content, that is for sure!

An exciting project I’ve been working on is the strategic collaboration and partnership between CityCraft Ventures and EcoDistricts.  We’re going to partner together in select cities across North America and will bring on board several other national organizations as part of the larger collaborative effort as time moves forward (stay tuned for more on that).  Our first collaborative effort together will be a strategic collaboration as part of the EcoDistricts Target Cities Program.  This collaboration was announced last week at the Clinton Global Initiative in Denver.

ecodistricts

Some history on me and EcoDistricts: I first became interested in EcoDistricts when I met Rob Bennett back in 2012.  Rob was at the time, the Executive Director for the Portland Sustainability Institute which later morphed into the EcoDistricts organization.  Rob is now CEO at EcoDistricts.  He was touring the Noisette Community with Noisette and CityCraft CEO, John L. Knott, Jr.  I was very much interested in learning more about the EcoDistricts concept.  I saw an opportunity to bring the idea and process to the Charleston region, helping cities accomplish sustainable development and deliver on a diverse set of sustainability initiatives.  In my role as Green Cities Program Manager at The Sustainability Institute (SI) I worked with municipalities to advance their sustainability goals.  I saw EcoDistricts as an opportunity to do so at the neighborhood level, allowing a geographic scale that was not too large and not too small, similar to the 3,000 acres of the Noisette Community.  I attended the EcoDistricts conference and was trained on the EcoDistricts framework in Portland Oregon in 2012.  (I previously blogged about this trip).  I came back to Charleston energized and full of ideas.  I introduced the idea to my team at SI for creating EcoDistricts in Charleston.  I subsequently presented the idea to the City of Charleston’s Department of Planning, Preservation and Sustainability.  The ideas were  pleasantly received and the decision to learn more and move forward was made.  We were focusing on the upper peninsula area of the City of Charleston.  I was project lead for the Charleston EcoDistricts team and worked to assemble a variety of city leaders to apply for and participate in the EcoDistricts Incubator program (we were successful and were accepted)  The EcoDistricts Incubator is a three-day executive level training program for leaders who are improving their cities from the neighborhood up. Through a mix of interactive plenary presentations and facilitated work sessions, the Incubator brings together experts in neighborhood planning, urban design, green infrastructure, project finance and public policy. The role of the Incubator is to curate and present the best ways to help cities work effectively with private, nonprofit and academic partners to implement sustainable neighborhood strategies for their community.

I left SI to become Director at CityCraft Ventures just before the Incubator team traveled to Portland.  It was bittersweet leaving SI as I was very attached to the project and to the idea of creating South Carolina’s first EcoDistrict in Charleston.  The good news is that the idea and hard work created a strong foundation of energy and support that outlasted my time at SI.  The concept and project lives on.  I am happy the idea and project has matured and evolved.  Today it is has taken root as Charleston UP ( Charleston Upper Peninsula Initiative).  I’m excited to watch the project progress.

When I joined CityCraft, I made sure to keep in touch with the EcoDistricts organization and we began discussing ways we may be able to collaborate and work together across North America.  CityCraft’s CEO John Knott is on the board for EcoDistricts, was keynote speaker for one of the first EcoDistricts Summits so there was some obvious synergy and opportunity for more collaboration.  I attended the EcoDistricts Summit in Boston last year and am now an Advisor for the Global EcoDistricts Protocol.  I’ll be headed to Portland Oregon in two weeks for our first advisory committee meeting and am looking forward to that.  Stay tuned for more in the coming weeks and months!

Update: March 17, 2015: Charleston UP EcoDistrict article from ULI http://urbanland.uli.org/sustainability/charlestons-upper-peninsula-sustainable-growth-knowledge-based-economy/

Noisette Journey to Sustainability Update Report Released

Earlier this month, I co-authored the Noisette Journey to Sustainability Update on behalf of The Noisette Company.  I’m proud to have played a role with Noisette and am happy to call the community home.

The Noisette regeneration launched in 2001 to improve the quality of life for residents in the southern section of North Charleston, SC. Covering a 3,000-acre area, a unique public-private partnership between The Noisette Company and the City of North Charleston resulted in the creation of an internationally recognized plan for revitalization. Over a twelve-year period, intense collaboration, a focus on triple bottom line principles, community involvement and strategic implementation resulted in over $500 million in public and private investment. Non-profit infrastructure was established and strengthened to address education, social justice and environmental health issues. Local capacity was established to continue the progression of the plan – a plan that continues to evolve.

The report can be viewed here.

Noisette Report

The Sustainability Institute Completes $500k, 2-year Energy Efficiency Research Project

CWIP Logo
So today, we released the report for the CharlestonWISE Impact Project of which I was the Project Manager on for The Sustainability Institute (SI).  I came into the project after it started and focused on the executing, monitoring, controlling and close-out phases of the project.  Right now, we’re in the process of sharing the report with all the major partners.  The data, research, lessons learned and all of that good stuff is already being used by other programs at SI and will continue to play a role in the local residential energy efficiency industry.  Below is our wording from the press release.  Download the report here CharlestonWISE Impact Project Report.  I’ve also included 4 case studies that profile 4 of 17 homes that received energy retrofits via the project.  More about our Green Cities Program here.  Enjoy!

The Sustainability Institute Completes Energy Efficiency Research Project to Better Understand the Current Condition of Charleston’s Residential Housing

A $500k, 2-year Project funded by The Home Depot Foundation’s Sustainable Cities Institute

CHARLESTON April 29, 2013 – The Sustainability Institute (SI) today released their CharlestonWISE Impact Project report, sharing their findings regarding energy efficiency with the Charleston community.  The project conducted needed research and market analysis to better understand the current condition of Charleston’s single-family residential housing stock and the potential for energy efficiency improvements.  The Project provided valuable support for the growth and development of the ongoing CharlestonWISE program through data collection, community outreach, market analysis and workforce development.  The report can be found at http://www.sustainabilityinstitutesc.org/downloads/CWIP__Final_Report.pdf.  SI partnered with the City of Charleston and other key organizations to design a program that utilized a collective impact approach and delivered on goals designed to further advance energy efficiency measures in Charleston.

Outcomes of the Project Include:
  • Implemented a city-wide energy efficiency partnership by conducting energy assessments on 152 single-family residential homes within the City of Charleston, including historic, low- to moderate-income households, and affordable housing units.
  • Performed energy efficiency retrofits on 17 low- to moderate-income homes to achieve significant utility savings and improve health and comfort issues.
  • Provided substantial and verifiable data on the current condition of Charleston’s residential building stocks, best practices for energy efficiency retrofits, and savings potential.
  • Created a specialized curriculum to teach energy efficiency renovations for historic structures in hot humid climates; and enhance the City’s Green Collar Workforce and energy efficiency services industry through industry growth and job opportunities.
  • Provided data needed to reduce the environmental impact of Charleston’s built environment, as well as arm Charleston’s building industry with the skilled labor force and resources it needs to integrate energy efficiency as a standard of building practices.
According to Bryan Cordell, Executive Director of The Sustainability Institute, “This significant investment from the Sustainable Cities Initiative has allowed us to collect data at an unprecedented level and has informed how we need to address upgrading our residential buildings across the City.  We now know the exact needs of buildings of various ages, designs and construction types in Charleston, and we’ve developed strategies now being implemented by our CharlestonWISE program.”

About The Sustainability Institute

The Sustainability Institute (SI) is an award-winning, nonprofit, 501c(3) organization with a mission of empowering South Carolina communities to transform our homes and workplaces to conserve energy and reduce our overall environmental impact.

For over a decade, The Sustainability Institute has worked one person at a time to achieve energy efficiency in our community and thereby produce positive effects locally as well as on the global environment. Our programs create a win-win-win scenario because they work together to save energy costs, improve the environment, and create jobs. Our urgent focus is creating energy efficiency in the ‘built environment’ — the buildings where we live and work.  Learn more at http://www.sustainabilityinstitutesc.org.

Project Case Studies:

CWIP Case Study 1 CWIP Case Study 2 CWIP Case Study 3 CWIP Case Study 4

Parks and Trails as a Catalyst for Revitalization

This Stuff Works

I’ve mentioned before that the Atlanta Beltline is one of my favorite projects in the country.  My connection to Atlanta spans a couple of phases in my life and I’ve been trying to keep up with the progress of the Beltline and also stay attuned to the challenges they face as they move the project forward.  Recent articles and videos have debated certain merits of the project (some are already complaining it is too crowded) and comparisons are being made to the economic development associated with the 1996 Olympics.  I was there during the Olympics (very fun times by the way) and saw first hand some of the development that occurred in and around Atlanta.  Some of that development was simply window dressing, hiding the undesirable underbelly of Atlanta from the prying eyes of the international community.  Some of the development was more comprehensive and community-based in nature and has had long-lasting positive effects.  Due to its sprawling nature and the lack of inhibiting geography, Atlanta has so many pockets of communities spread throughout the City (I’m talking ITP/inside the perimeter).  What intrigues me the most about the Beltline is the vision to connect many of these communities in ways that allow you to travel in a manner that does not involve a car.  As someone who spent 2 – 5+ hours a day in my car while working in and around Atlanta, I’ve come to appreciate the improved quality of life one experiences when transportation options are greater and commute times are less (Charleston, stop complaining about your “traffic problems”).

The way the Beltline utilizes systems of parks and trails to connect communities is not a new concept but one that if done right can do more than simply improve transportation.  It encourages investment and furthers economic development.  It creates healthier communities and individuals.  This rails to trails movement is strong throughout the country and now my very own Charleston has a great opportunity to make its own statement and along the way, add value to an area that is primed for revitalization.  I attended an Urban Land Institute meeting this morning and listened to Kate Nevin of Enough Pie and Tom Bradford of Charleston Moves introduce their ideas around the concept of a “LowLine” in the upper peninsula part of the City of Charleston.  I’m assuming the name pays homage to New York’s HighLine and maybe Atlanta’s Beltline but regardless the idea of a lowline in the Lowcountry is gaining momentum.  The connection that almost 1.5 miles of unused railroad tracks totaling close to 55 acres has to revitalizing an underutilized and geographic important area of the city is becoming more and more evident.  I look forward to hearing the progress of the LowLine concept play out and will pay close attention to the synergies created for revitalizing that part of town.  It is evident to me that parks and trails can transform  our communities and become not only a catalyst for revitalization but also a valued asset for many years to come.

pie

My Beltline Visit Last Week

Map of Eastside Trail

Map of Eastside Trail

I was in Atlanta last week for the Southeast Energy Alliance Conference (SEEA) and I had an opportunity one cold and rainy morning to explore a section of the Beltine that runs approximately from Piedmont Park to the Inman Park area.  It was great seeing the progress of the project.  The section I ran/ jogged/walked/splashed through included the Ponce City Market project (the largest adaptive reuse project in Atlanta’s history) by Jamestown who is also developing Mixson in my own backyard of North Charleston (The Sustainability Institute has an office there) and we enjoy the partnering our organizations have collaborated on thus far…but I digress…the path I took also winded through Piedmont Park, the Historic Fourth Ward Park, and a yet to be finished section of the Beltline.  Below are pictures I took along the way.

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Historic Structure Receives Energy Retrofit

As Part of the CharlestonWISE Impact Project, this historic Charleston home built around 1880 received an energy retrofit.  The CharlestonWISE Impact Project is a partnership program between the City of Charleston and The Sustainability Institute (SI), and funded through a grant from the Sustainable Cities Institute.  The Project provided valuable support for the growth and development of the CharlestonWISE program through data collection, community outreach, market analysis and workforce development.  I helped to complete the project as one of my first responsibilities at SI.  During 2011 and 2012 the Project performed 152 home energy assessments and 17 home energy retrofits on homes throughout the City of Charleston. These assessments provided much needed information on how our homes use energy and how we can better help all Charleston residents reduce their energy use and have healthy, comfortable, energy-efficient homes.  17 out of the 152 homes that received energy assessments also were chosen to receive various levels of energy retrofits.  More on the Impact Project here.

CWIP Case Study 1 jpg

For the pdf click on CWIP Case Study 1

This home received a comprehensive energy assessment by a qualified energy advocate.  This assessment modeled energy improvements and recommended a scope of work specific to the house.  Subsequently, the home received an energy retrofit with projections of 55% improvement in energy savings.  We will revisit this home a year later to reanalyze the data and projections.  Improving an existing home is more sustainable then building a new one.  Improving a home that is historic helps to ensure that these treasures stay around for many more years to come.  The Southeastern climate presents some unique challenges due to its warmth and humidity.  If not done properly, irreversible damage can be dome to historic homes when a retrofit takes place.  That’s why we worked hard to deliver a curriculum for contractors, energy auditors and historic preservation professionals that focused on improving energy efficiency while maintaining historic integrity.  By replacing an aging improperly sized heating & air conditioning system in this home with mini splits and ductless units, we able to utilize new technology and minimize impact to the home.  By encapsulating the attic area with open cell spray foam in a removable manner, we improved the building envelope while preserving the historical integrity of the structure.

Another retrofit conducted as part of this Project can be found here.

 

Update 4/29/13: More on the Impact Project here.

Charleston Green Business Challenge

ChasGBC_logonewThe Charleston Green Business Challenge (GBC) is wrapping up it’s second year and is now taking sign ups for 2013.  As part of the steering committee, I’ve recently been assisting with the scoring of about 50 businesses’ 2012 scorecards.  Green Business Challenges and similar programs have popped up around the country and are a great way to educate and really scale up city sustainability.  The Charleston program has helped a total of 135 businesses meet their goal of providing a healthier and more sustainable work environment. In the first year, businesses averaged over $6,000 in financial savings as they achieved their green business goals.  All participants are a part of a unique team of almost 7 million square feet of offices and businesses in the Lowcountry who each offer inspiring contributions to what it means to operate a green business.  Collectively the GBC as a whole implemented about 600 new green strategies throughout the year.

The goals of the voluntary Charleston’s Green Business Challenge are to improve environmental performance of commercial and institutional buildings and their operations. Three key elements are reducing energy, waste and water. Going green is not just the right thing to do for the community and the planet; it has many good financial and health benefits as well. Many building owners and companies have noted significant bottom line financial savings from their environmental and energy efficiency initiatives. Participating in the GBC will allow businesses, institutions and Charleston, to get a head start on these savings and these environmental benefits.

The GBC is led by the City of Charleston.  The primary interest for the City is to continue to assist businesses with ways to save money through practices that will both benefit their business and the community as a whole. The idea is to offer a program that provides an easy path to improvement that is both measurable and achievable. The twelve month program allows businesses to see results throughout the process. It rewards not only reducing waste and consumption, but also incentivizes community involvement and stewardship. The program is managed by the Planning, Preservation and Sustainability Department at the City of Charleston.

From the GBC Team:

On March 1st we start our new GBC year. We hope your team will join us.

Here’s what we know.

  • The Green Business Challenge is a great way to get your team behind energy, water and waste reduction strategies as well as buying local.
  • Your team will make your own goals.
  • We’ll have trainings that will help connect you with resources as well as learn from each other.
  • And we’ll have fun celebrating everyone’s successes-more on that in another paragraph.


To get started in this year’s GBC, click here to sign up for your businesses password and login.

Historic Fourth Ward Park

I visited the Historic Fourth Ward Park in Atlanta in 2011.  It is located behind the Ponce City Market redevelopment and is a part of the Atlanta Beltline, one of my favorite projects in the country of which I’ve been following the progress of ever since I lived in Atlanta and the idea first started to take root.  The Fourth Ward Park has so many sustainable features incorporated into the design but the hopes of helping to spur revitalization in the area is its most crucial function.  Providing an area for residents to gather and play and have a place they can be proud of is critical to the larger redevelopment efforts in the area.  I was impressed and pleased to see the progress on this visit.  More detailed info can be found here.  Enjoy the pics!

Noisette – A National Model for Sustainable Community Revitalization

Noisette Community Map

This is a previous blog post I wrote for the “Planning for Integrated Restoration” Noisette Community blog in Feb 2011.  I was working for the Noisette Company, who at the time was working to redevelop the appx 350 acre Navy Yard at Noisette as one of the nation’s largest sustainable urban renewal developments.  At that time, the Navy Yard project was home 85+ businesses and 2,000+ employees.  It also was in the cross hairs of a series of lawsuits and polarizing public views as to what the future for the area held.  The City and the State of South Carolina were locked in a stalemate over port and rail related land use issues.  Some of the Noisette Company’s land holdings were at the center of the debacle.  I could talk and write for hours about all of that but the point of the below blog post was to defend the accomplishments of Noisette.  Admittedly so, Noisette was confusing to many.  In reality, Noisette was many things at different times.  Noisette is a place.  It is an appx 3000 acre community that is the historic core of the City of North Charleston.  Noisette is a plan.  It was a multi-year, master plan for community revitalization for an area that was hit especially hard after the closing of the Navy Base.  Noisette is a company.  The Noisette Company’s main focus was acting as master developer for a portion of the former Navy base in a public private partnership to revitalize that part of the City.  This blog post was my attempt to defend Noisette.  The Post could use an update to show where things are now in 2013 and I’ll put that on my list of to-do’s.  Stay tuned for that.

[Update can be found here]

Noisette – A National Model for Sustainable Community Revitalization

Written 2/8/11

“The Noisette project at the old navy yard is dead.” – Ron Brinson in letter to the Post and Courier 1/2/2011

“…the failed Noisette real estate development…” – Joe Taylor in SC Department of Commerce Press Release 12/22/10

The Navy Yard at Noisette is a child of the Noisette Master Plan that began in 2001.  Ten years later, there is some confusion as to the success and future of the plan(s).  Noisette has received numerous national awards and accolades over the years yet the local perception in the Charleston region is misguided.   Too often the words failed, failure, or dead precede the word Noisette and that is a shame.  A shame because they are wrong and a shame because this “failed” perception is a desired label by many that do not call the area home nor do they come to educate themselves before speaking in this manner.  They do not see the progress that so many in the area have worked so hard on for these past 1o years…or perhaps they do not want to see.  It seems that many do not wish to see the success of the Noisette project(s) and for whatever reason, continue to label it in this manner.

One thing is clear, if you truly understood the master plan and took a ride thru the community today and compared it to where the area was 10 years ago, you would see why the term “failed” when used to describe the Noisette area is completely inappropriate.  This determination between success and failure is in the eye of the beholder but I know there are many that take offense to an outsider calling it a failure.  Noisette is more than the Navy Yard development alone.  In fact, the Navy Yard is just one piece of a larger vision and plan, a plan that in a relatively short amount of time has garnered national attention, praise, and accomplishment.

Noisette’s success or failure cannot be judged like any other typical developer.  Typical developers utilize one matrix in determining which projects they under take and therefore measure success, the bottom line.  Noisette utilizes the triple bottom line.  A balance of people, planet, and profit.  This makes Noisette unique and different and therefore, traditional measurements of success cannot be applied.  The revitalization of the Noisette community required a different approach and the Noisette Company was the only company willing to take the challenge as well as the risk.  Today, because of the vision and the plan, other developers, companies, residents, and the even the Charleston County School District have joined in to invest in the sustainable revitalization of the community.

“A Community of Lasting Value (from the master planning process 2001)

Noisette redevelopment combines the efforts of the Noisette Company, as well as City Planners, local residents, business owners, builders and craftspeople.  The approved master plan outlines work that will take decades to complete.  The ultimate goal will be realized when Noisette is established as a new urban center for North Charleston and the Lowcountry – a center that celebrates its history and natural environment, and a community enjoyed by a diverse citizenry who find it adds new value to their lives.”

If you still desire to measure the success of Noisette as compared to any other developer, you must at the very least, revisit the goals and timelines set forth by the original plan.  Without even considering that modifications to any plan change over time, in particular, development plans adjusting to difficult economic times, you can measure the Noisette project a success on multiple levels.  It’s important to point out that from the beginning, the vision and plan was to take decades to bare fruit.  Perhaps the scale of progress and the speed at which progress has occurred does not satisfy those that use the word failure.

There is a misperception that because the master planning process began in 2001, that is how long the Navy Yard project has been undergoing redevelopment.  Let’s clear that up.  The first years were committed to public engagement and involvement.  All stakeholders were invited to participate in the planning process.  Navy Yard property was acquired by Noisette in phases beginning in the second half of 2003 and ending with the final transfer of land in 2006.  For a redevelopment project of this size, scope and importance, things did not and could not be rushed.  Environmental clean up, infrastructure planning and engineering were taking place behind the scenes.  This process takes years before new construction can take place.  It is during this time that several factors were at play:

1)         We entered the worst economic recession since the 1930’s.  Financing dried up for everything from small subdivisions to large urban developments.

2)        It is apparent that behind the scenes, State government forces were at play, made apparent in 2008 by the release of their State Rail Plan placing an intermodal train yard in the center of the Navy Yard project.  State officials have also commented to citizens that their plan has been in the works for 10 years.  These few individuals have never wanted Noisette to succeed.

While cleanup, infrastructure planning, and engineering efforts were taking place, many success stories at the Navy Yard and in the larger Noisette community were taking place.  During the master planning process, key areas were identified in the community for immediate redevelopment to jumpstart additional investment and revitalization efforts.  Focusing on these areas like a surgeon would focus on vital organs for an individual while they are lying on the operating table dying, was critical to encourage the overall growth and success of the plan.  Concentrating on these key areas have spawned additional development and investment in the community.  Some examples include:

  • Century Oaks now Oak Terrace Preserve – Would residents in this nationally recognized community use the word failure to describe their community?  Would residents in the surrounding community argue failure when in 2008 home values in the area had the second highest appreciation rate of any neighborhood or district within the Lowcountry?
  • North Park Village now Horizon Village – What once was littered in run down buildings and razor wire fences, making up the largest public housing project in the state is now a model for affordable housing for the region, providing pride and opportunity for residents that was not available prior.  Would you call that a failure?
  • Mixson – A unique new community built with a wide variety of home styles providing the latest green and energy-efficient technologies.
  • Half Moon Outfitters – A rehabilitated storefront on E. Montague Ave was the First LEED Platinum building in South Carolina.
  • Hunley Waters –36 homes to be built to Earthcraft and Energy star standards border the overlook the Noisette Creek Preserve.
  • East Montague Business District – Infrastructure and streetscape improvements have revitalized this once mostly deserted avenue giving the Park Circle area it’s distinct character and appeal with a unique mixture of local businesses, restaurants and bars.
  • GARCO – Environmental cleanup is nearing completion. The recession and rail plan issue no doubt have slowed development opportunities for this mixed-use development.
  • Riverfront Park – A 15-acre sustainable park bordering the Cooper River provides river access to the community for the first time in close to 100 years.
  • Navy Yard – The Navy Yard at Noisette has gained national and international accolades for the appx 340 acres revitalization of a portion of the former Charleston Naval Base.  With 2,000+ employees and 80+ businesses operating in the Navy Yard footprint, the site has undergone a revitalization unique to any business community the region has to offer.   Properties purchased and rehabilitated by private entities include Runaway Bay Restaurant, Coleman Snow Consultants, WPC Engineering, Parham & Co., Live Oak Consultants, Lead Dog Properties, Lowcountry Orphan Relief, Callies Biscuits and several other private purchases.  A solid foundation of high paying job growth opened the door for residential development as the newly finished West yard Lofts shows.

The Master Plan also identified the need for nonprofit entities to be set up to address the various issues facing the community.  These organizations were either set up by, or supported by Noisette and the subsequent Noisette Foundation.  The Noisette Company and Foundation lists a myriad of organizations it has supported directly and indirectly.  The Foundation dedicates itself to the issues of Environment, Human Health, Economic Development, Social Justice, Education, and Arts & Culture of the community.  The Noisette Foundation is the catalyst for collaborative neighborhood redevelopment in North Charleston. It identifies local community strengths, listens closely to residents and promotes successful local projects. It studies persistent social problems and works to enhance neighborhood problems solving through research, advocacy and the development of relevant solutions.  What other developer out there can list this on their bio?

A sample of organizations or programs supported thru the foundation include:  The Sustainability Institute, the Michaux Conservancy, the Michaux Restoration Crew (a Civic Justice Corps), HUB Academy, SC Reentry Initiative, Energy Conservation Corps, AmeriCorps*VISTA Regional center, SC STRONG, Lowcountry Local First, His Way Ministries, Metanoia, and the list goes on.

Schools as Centers of Community is a concept identified in the Noisette Master Plan.  The plan also identified the need for creation of a multi-disciplinary graduate research center.  This center would turn the Noisette Community into the Silicon Valley for the restoration economy.  Storm Cunningham referenced this concept in his books entitled Rewealth and Restoration Economy.  Central to the concept of creating a more livable community is the quality of the services, resources and amenities that the schools offer to their residents.  The school district has invested heavily into the area.  North Charleston Elementary became the first LEED silver certified school in the state.  N Charleston High School under went substantial improvements and additions.  The Center of Arts and Academics which serves Academic Magnet High School, School of the Arts Middle and High Schools is a massive investment into the community.  Palmetto Scholars Academy is the state’s first gifted and talented charter school.  Noisette identified the need for and worked tirelessly to bring a research institution of higher education to the area.  To this end, Noisette worked with Clemson for years after they expressed an interest in locating a research campus here.  With the Noisette focus and the Warren Lasch conservation Center already nearby, the Clemson restoration Institute and subsequent Wind Turbine Testing facility made perfect sense.  The list regarding community education opportunities continues on in the master plan.

Although comparing the success of Noisette with other developments is rudimentary in nature, many continue to do so.  In reality, in 2001, there were no other projects like Noisette.  No other developer decided to engage the public the way Noisette did.  No other developer worked hand in hand with small business leaders, community groups, and City officials to work towards a mutually beneficial plan.  No other developer spent money on preserving the historical and environmental sensitive areas in the community.  No other developer forward funded public parks.  No other private developer funded a community-based master planning process for over 2,700 acres of a city.  Noisette utilized the best in their respective fields from around the country to work with the citizenry in transforming their city.  All that being said, for those that will continue to measure Noisette against typical developers, let’s look at some of these comparisons.

  • Port Royal Sale – the most recent project to fall thru with multiple issues regarding the state surrounding this possible deal
  • Daniel Island Ryland Center and Publix Shopping Center Complex – Foreclosure action, vacancies and asset values have not left Daniel Island untouched by market conditions
  • Carolina Park – Sold at foreclosure auction 2010
  • Anson House – July 2010, BOA foreclosed on the developer of the 32-unit luxury condominium near SC Aquarium
  • KB Homes – 2010, a national homebuilder pulls out of Charleston market.  Are they a failure?
  • The Tides luxury condominium project in Mt, Pleasant went into foreclosure in 2010
  • Magnolia – Magnolia is the designated local competitor of the Navy Yard.  Many people make comparisons of the two projects since they had a similar scope, challenges, development plans and timelines.  Aside from some environmental cleanup, little progress has been made on this site.
  • Carnes Crossroads – 2,000 acres in the Summerville-Goose Creek area is a mixed-use community by the Daniel Island Company.  Their timeline has drastically changed compared to original projections.  This scale of project has received little press regarding their inability to move forward with substantial vertical construction.
  • Long Savannah – Originally planned 3,000+ acres in the West Ashley Area of Charleston called for mixed-use development.  Have heard little if anything regarding this project in over 3 years.
  • Watson Hill – 6,000 + acre proposed development near Middleton Place went into foreclosure in the end of 2008
  • Cigar Factory – Mixed-use development in Charleston.  40k sq ft of retail, 25k sq ft of office space and 66 residential lofts.  Scheduled completion date of July 2010 came and went.  Construction was halted after federal bank regulators seized the small Georgia lender that was to provide the $37 million to complete the overhaul of the historic East Bay Street building putting the project on hold indefinitely.

The Noisette vision represents the only way that our region can successfully deal with regional growth pressure without burdening our natural environment and municipal governments.  Some see the benefits to the surrounding area like reduced recidivism, and increased educational opportunities being pursued by the Noisette Foundation. Some recognize that our roadways are becoming too crowded and more projects closer to Charleston core are needed.   Over the past several years, we have taken note of an interest in people wanting to come back to the Noisette area.  This mirrors a national trend that has firmly established itself in other cities around the US.  It represents a move towards urban, walkable, mixed-use environments.  First tier suburbs—ones like Park Circle that began their decline in the 50’s—have become hot neighborhoods again throughout the U.S.  Combine that market shift with a vision for revitalization like the Noisette Community Master Plan, and it’s not surprising to see the positive results.  Come see for yourself.  I’ll be more then happy to show you around.

View the Noisette Master Plan

Some Noisette Community Highlights:

North Charleston is home to over 40% of the Charleston region’s office market

Development dates back to the late 19th century and includes many property owners and neighborhoods

Subject of the Noisette Master Plan for revitalization. Plan received Award of Excellence from ASLA (Oct 2005)

Proclaimed as one of Nation’s Top 10 neighborhoods by Cottage Living magazine (July 2008)

Men’s Journal Magazine names Park Circle community as one of Nation’s Coolest Neighborhoods (June 2009)

North Charleston named Winner of Award of Excellence for Sustainable Community Development by Home Depot Foundation (Dec 2009)

North Charleston chosen to receive the Award for Municipal Excellence for Sustainable Urban Revitalization from the National League of Cities (Nov 2010)

Academic Magnet School ranks at #15 for America’s Best High Schools by Newsweek Magazine (June 2011)

This Old House magazine names Park Circle as a “Best Old-House Neighborhood” (Feb 2012)

The City of North Charleston named a “Playful City USA” community by KaBOOM!, the national non-profit dedicated to saving play for America’s children. (2011, & 2012)