File:Urban infill, Lancaster - geograph.org.uk - 651765.jpg
Urban infill, Lancaster, England. The small buildings in the centre stand on a former garden.

Infill in its broadest meaning is material that fills in an otherwise unoccupied space. The term is commonly used in association with construction techniques such as wattle and daub, and civil engineering activities such as land reclamation.

Construction

When a building is constructed in timber framing, the spaces are filled with non-structural material that is known as infill. The earliest type of infill was wattle and daub. Other materials used for the purpose have been lath and plaster, and brickwork (when it is known as nogging). The infill may be covered by other materials, including plaster, weatherboarding or tiles.[1]

Urban planning

Urban infill

File:Baulücke in Köln-Weidenpesch (9506).jpg
Example of an urban infill site

In the urban planning and development industries, infill is the use of land within a built-up area for further construction, especially as part of a community redevelopment or growth management program or as part of smart growth. It focuses on the reuse and repositioning of obsolete or underutilized buildings and sites. This type of development is essential to renewing blighted neighborhoods and knitting them back together with more prosperous communities.[2] Redevelopment is development that occurs on previously developed land. Infill buildings are constructed on vacant or underutilized property or between existing buildings.[3]

Challenges to urban infill

Although infill is an appealing tool for community redevelopment and growth management, it is often far more costly for developers to develop land within the city than it is to develop on the periphery, in suburban greenfield land.[4] Costs for developers include acquiring land, removing existing structures,[5] and testing for and cleaning up any environmental contamination.[4]

Scholars have argued that infill development is more financially feasible for development when it occurs on a large plot of land (several acres).[5] Large scale development benefits from what economists call economies of scale, and reduces the surrounding negative influences of neighborhood blight, crime, or poor schools.[5] However, large scale infill development is often difficult in a blighted neighborhood for several reasons. These include the difficulties in acquiring land and in gaining community support.

Amassing land is one challenge that infill development poses that greenfield development does not. Neighborhoods that are targets for infill often have parcels of blighted land scattered among places of residence. Developers must be persistent in order to amass land parcel by parcel, and often find resistance from landowners in the target area.[5] One way to approach this problem is for city management to use eminent domain to claim land. This is often unpopular among city management, as well as among neighborhood residents. Developers must deal with regulatory barriers, visit numerous government offices for permitting, interact with city management that is frequently unwilling to use eminent domain to remove current residents, and generally engage in public-private partnerships with local government.[5]

Developers also meet with high social goal barriers in which the local officials and residents are not interested in the same type of development. Although citizen involvement has been found to facilitate the development of brownfield land, residents in blighted neighborhoods often want to convert vacant lots to parks or recreational facilities, whereas external actors seek to build apartment complexes, commercial shopping centers, or industrial sites .[6]

Suburban infill

Suburban infill describes the development of land in existing suburban areas that was left vacant during the development of the suburb. It is one of the tenets of the New Urbanism and smart growth trends of urging densification to reduce the need for automobiles, encourage walking, and ultimately save energy. One exception to this is the practice of urban agriculture, in which land in the urban or suburban area is retained to grow food for local consumption.

The Village of Ponderosa[7] in West Des Moines, Iowa is a good example of suburban infill. It was formerly a 9-hole golf course surrounded by suburban West Des Moines businesses and tract homes, but starting in 2006 it was redeveloped into a higher-density mixed-use community with a pedestrian friendly retail center.

Infill housing

Infill housing is the insertion of additional housing units into an already approved subdivision or neighborhood. These can be provided as additional units built on the same lot, by dividing existing homes into multiple units, or by creating new residential lots by further subdivision or lot line adjustments. Units may also be built on vacant lots.

Infill residential development does not require the subdivision of greenfield land, natural areas, or prime agricultural land. Existing infrastructure may in some cases need little expansion for utility and other services.

As with other new construction, structures built as infill may clash architecturally with older, existing buildings.

Infill, a water and aeolian process

Examples of infills occur in geology. The Touchet Formation of rhythmite layers located in the Northwestern United States, had intervening periods of aridity. Erosional cracks were later infilled with layers of soil material, especially from aeolian processes. The infilled sections formed vertical inclusions in the horizontally deposited layers of the Touchet Formation, and thus explaining events that intervened in time among the forty-one layers that were deposited.

See also

References

  1. Script error
  2. Infill Philadelphia
  3. Southeast Tennessee Development District, Chattanooga, TN. "Green Infrastructure Handbook." January 2011
  4. 4.0 4.1 Script error
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Script error
  6. Script error
  7. Village of Ponderosa: West Des Moines Real Estate, Homes Condos Lofts & Retail

External links