About Us News Policy Development Projects Resources Contact

Policy Topics

Smart Growth:

Join the Alliance for a Livable Los Angeles

Join Housing L.A.

Building Healthy Communities 101

To sprawl or not to sprawl?

High Speed Rail AND Parks

What Do You Mean by "Affordable" Housing?

Are We Producing Enough Affordable Housing?

Encouraging Transit Villages

Condo Converters: The Problem or the Solution?

Complete Streets

Rethinking Parking

There is No Free Parking

Tips for Riding Transit

The Scourge of Free Parking

The Cost of Car Ownership

Promoting Joint Use Schools in Los Angeles

Livable Places Calls for TOD on the MTA Blue Line

"Walking to the Park" Report

 

City of Los Angeles

Proposals:

City and County Move to Update Density Bonus Laws

Including Affordable Residences in New Development

Fostering Equitable Development in Downtown L.A.

Adopted Local Ordinances:

Los Angeles Adopts Town Home Ordinance

Removing Barriers to Housing Construction on Corner Commerical Sites

Los Angeles City Council Expands Adaptive Reuse Incentives

City of Los Angeles Adopts Four New Ordinances to Spur Housing Creation

Stay Informed

Sign Up To Receive Email Updates From Livable Places







about us | news | policy
development projects | resources
contact | home



Livable Places
634 So. Spring Street, Suite 727
Los Angeles, CA 90014
213.622.5980
213.622.3458 fax
info@livableplaces.org



photo

Complete Streets


Neighborhood streets are the lifeblood of cities.  Like arteries that sustain life in surrounding cells, our streets sustain life in our neighborhoods.  Simply put, if our streets are not healthy, then our neighborhoods are not healthy. 

So what are healthy streets?  First, a street is all of the public space that includes the car lanes, median, and sidewalks right up to the private property line. Healthy, or what we call “complete streets”, are designed to serve the needs of all the people who use them—fathers pushing strollers, grandmothers, children walking to school, people driving to work, bicycle messengers, people using wheelchairs, and people taking the bus, just to name a few. 

Click here to read Livable Places' guide to Complete Streets

Click here to learn about the 'Complete the Streets' national campaign



Top
Livable Places