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Comprehensive Security Planning: A Program for Arthur Capper Dwellings, Washington, DC
The findings of a residential vulnerability analysis for Arthur Capper Dwellings, a 1,100 - unit public housing project in Washington, D.C., are presented, along with a comprehensive security plan based on that analysis. The vulnerability analysis consists of three parts: a household safety and security survey, a site security review, and an examination of the project's social structure and the delivery of police and other security - related services. The key element of the resulting security plan is the division of Capper Dwellings into 12 neighborhoods. These neighborhoods would consist of from 40 to 90 families and their definition would be reinforced in two ways: (1) tenants would be organized in each neighborhood and leaders would be selected, and (2) they would be defined architecturally. The plan calls for site improvements to establish boundaries and aid in access control, the internalization of activities within each neighborhood, and the assignment of space to individual families when feasible. The plan also calls for the establishment of a security planning board made up of neighborhood leaders, housing management staff, metropolitan police, and project security guards. Also proposed are improved circulation through the site, increased lighting, and the establishment of structured recreational areas. A profile of the crime problem in Capper Dwellings is appended, along with materials dealing with community programs serving the residents, controlled entranceways, and service delivery in the project. Photographs, maps, site designs, and tabular data are included.
Comprehensive Security Planning: A Program for Arthur Capper Dwellings, Washington, DC
The findings of a residential vulnerability analysis for Arthur Capper Dwellings, a 1,100 - unit public housing project in Washington, D.C., are presented, along with a comprehensive security plan based on that analysis. The vulnerability analysis consists of three parts: a household safety and security survey, a site security review, and an examination of the project's social structure and the delivery of police and other security - related services. The key element of the resulting security plan is the division of Capper Dwellings into 12 neighborhoods. These neighborhoods would consist of from 40 to 90 families and their definition would be reinforced in two ways: (1) tenants would be organized in each neighborhood and leaders would be selected, and (2) they would be defined architecturally. The plan calls for site improvements to establish boundaries and aid in access control, the internalization of activities within each neighborhood, and the assignment of space to individual families when feasible. The plan also calls for the establishment of a security planning board made up of neighborhood leaders, housing management staff, metropolitan police, and project security guards. Also proposed are improved circulation through the site, increased lighting, and the establishment of structured recreational areas. A profile of the crime problem in Capper Dwellings is appended, along with materials dealing with community programs serving the residents, controlled entranceways, and service delivery in the project. Photographs, maps, site designs, and tabular data are included.
Comprehensive Security Planning: A Program for Arthur Capper Dwellings, Washington, DC
1977
200 pages
Report
Keine Angabe
Englisch
Planning methods for small dwellings
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