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FAR EASTERN UNIVERSITY

Institute of Architecture and Fine Arts

ORIOLA, ROBERTA JOYCE D. HOMEWORK NO. 3


AR-508 PLANNING

Q1: Places which can be used for many different purposes offer their users more choice than places
whose design limits them to a single fixed use.
A. Variety B. Permeability C. Robustness
A1: C. ROBUSTNESS
SOURCE: Responsive Environments by Bentley,Alcock,Murrain,Mcglynn,Smith pg. 10

Q2: Making the design encourage people to put their own mark on the places where they live and
work.
A. Personalization B. Permeability C. Legibility
A2: A. PERSONALIZATION
SOURCE: Responsive Environments by Bentley,Alcock,Murrain,Mcglynn,Smith pg. 11

Q3: The extent to which an environment allows people a choice of access through it, from place to
place, is therefore a key measure of its responsiveness.
A. Segregation B. Permeability C. Visual appropriateness
A3: B. PERMEABILITY
SOURCE: Responsive Environments by Bentley,Alcock,Murrain,Mcglynn,Smith pg. 12

Q4: Locating uses on the site


A4: VARIETY
SOURCE: Responsive Environments by Bentley,Alcock,Murrain,Mcglynn,Smith pg. 11

Q5: Designing the external image


A5: VISUAL APPROPRIATENESS
SOURCE: Responsive Environments by Bentley,Alcock,Murrain,Mcglynn,Smith pg. 11

Q6: A process which sets out to achieve progressive advancement to the human condition, involving
taking action and attaining material growth and social fullment over time.
A6: DEVELOPMENT
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 12

Q7: It is public forethought and conscious involvement before taking community-determined public-
interest action to effect improved change.
A7: PLANNING
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 12

Q8: Outcomes for the twenty-rst century from the 1992 United Nations Conference on Environment
and Development, at Rio de Janeiro.
A8: AGENDA 21
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1

Q9: A systemic people-controlled process combining conservation with development which sets out to
meet consumer needs at socially and environmentally acceptable costs, and without degrading natural
resource ows or depleting resource capital.
A9: SUSTAINABILITY
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1

Q10: The fractal components within human settlements which link or cohere to provide a cityscape.
A10: URBAN
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1

Q11: Additional to conservation: mothballing natural and heritage resources on account of their
perceived societal signicance.
A11: PRESERVATION
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1
Q12: Rural land-use programs engaging a bottom-up philosophy wherein landowners are guided to
identify their own problems and provide their own sustainable solutions.
A12: LANDCARE
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1

Q13: A term which can be regarded as similar to but less politically centrist than enablement.
A13: EMPOWERMENT
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1

Q14: The political process whereby decision-taking is devolved to the lowest workable political level.
A14: SUBSIDIARITY
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1

Q15: Controls aimed at specifying a category of uses and users for inclusion in a specied area.
A15: INCLUSIONARY
SOURCE: Sustainable Urban Planning by Robert Riddell page 1

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