How well has land-use planning worked under different governance regimes? A case study in the Portland, OR-Vancouver, WA metropolitan area, USA

•We examine urban growth boundary effectiveness at conserving farm and forest land in Portland, OR-Vancouver, WA (USA).•We focus on forest, farm, and developed land uses from the mid-1970s to the mid-2000s.•We found that urban growth boundaries have effectively contained low-density residential and...

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Published inLandscape and urban planning Vol. 131; pp. 51 - 63
Main Authors Kline, Jeffrey D., Thiers, Paul, Ozawa, Connie P., Alan Yeakley, J., Gordon, Sean N.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Amsterdam Elsevier B.V 01.11.2014
Elsevier
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Summary:•We examine urban growth boundary effectiveness at conserving farm and forest land in Portland, OR-Vancouver, WA (USA).•We focus on forest, farm, and developed land uses from the mid-1970s to the mid-2000s.•We found that urban growth boundaries have effectively contained low-density residential and urban development.•These effects have varied among counties and between the Oregon and Washington portions of the metropolitan area.•Differences in effectiveness likely owe in part to each jurisdiction's unique geography and land use planning history. We examine land use planning outcomes over a 30-year period in the Portland, OR-Vancouver, WA (USA) metropolitan area. The four-county study region enables comparisons between three Oregon counties subject to Oregon's 1973 Land Use Act (Senate Bill 100) and Clark County, WA which implemented land use planning under Washington's 1990 Growth Management Act. We describe county-level historical land uses from the mid-1970s to the mid-2000s, including low-density residential and urban development, both outside and inside of current urban growth boundaries. We use difference-in-differences models to test whether differences in the proportions of developed land resulting from implementation of urban growth boundaries are statistically significant and whether they vary between Oregon and Washington. Our results suggest that land use planning and urban growth boundaries now mandated both in Oregon and Washington portions of the study area have had a measurable and statistically significant effect in containing development and conserving forest and agricultural lands in the Portland-Vancouver metropolitan area. Our results also suggest, however, that these effects differ across the four study-area counties, likely owing in part to differences in counties’ initial levels of development, distinctly different land use planning histories, and how restrictive their urban growth boundaries were drawn.
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ISSN:0169-2046
1872-6062
DOI:10.1016/j.landurbplan.2014.07.013