Urban Planner II - Historic Preservation
Company: City of Atlanta
Location: Atlanta
Posted on: October 26, 2024
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Job Description:
Posting Expires: Until Filled Salary Range:
$67,701.42-112,907.12 The Urban Planner II is responsible for
supporting the successful implementation of: Atlanta City Design,
the City of Atlanta---s historic preservation program regulations,
and policies, the responsibilities of the Atlanta Urban Design
Commission, the Future Places Project, and the initiatives of the
Office of Design. Duties at this level include, but are not limited
to: providing quality customer service to the stakeholders of
Atlanta; ensuring that project applications, project design
reviews, staff reports, enforcement actions, research projects, and
open record requests are processed efficiently and in a timely
manner; and performing administrative, analytical and technical
functions in support of the development, implementation and
monitoring of the City---s historic preservation and urban design
programs, regulations, and policies. This work is done in close
collaboration with the Office of Design---s other functional units
--- the Public Space Studio and the Planning Studio --- as well as
other offices of the Department of City Planning, other City
agencies, community members, and private sector partners. This
would be accomplished with very general supervision from the
Planning Studio Assistant Director. MAJOR DUTIES AND
RESPONSIBILITIES General Description & Classification Standards The
City of Atlanta Department of City Planning (DCP) is committed to
implementing Atlanta City Design and transforming Atlanta into the
best possible version of itself. Adopted into the city charter in
December 2017, Atlanta City Design articulates an aspiration for
the future city that Atlantans can fall in love with, knowing that
if people love their city, they will make better decisions about
it. The Office of Design of the Department of City Planning
provides leadership for the physical design of the city. It
accomplishes this through the design of physical plans for the
logical organization of our future city, creation of vibrant public
spaces that cultivate public life, and architectural guidance,
including preservation, of high-quality buildings that contribute
to a cohesive public realm. This work is framed by Atlanta City
Design and driven by the desire to design a city for everyone in
the most inclusive way possible. The Historic Preservation Studio
of the Office of Design is responsible for the implementation of
all the City of Atlanta---s historic preservation programs and
activities at all scales - from the entire city, to districts,
neighborhoods, blocks, streets and buildings. These programs and
activities include architectural review using historic preservation
design regulations within a public-facing process; wide-ranging
technical assistance to individual property and business owners,
City residents, community groups, outside researchers, other City
agencies and other government entities; supporting the enforcement
of the City---s historic preservation regulations; creating and
managing programs and policies that advance the goals of the
City---s historic preservation program; and incorporating the
City---s historic places and spaces into its future. These actions
will guide the physical and economic development of our rapidly
growing city. The programs and activities must thoughtfully and
creatively consider how best to leverage the value of the City---s
historic places and spaces to achieve desired patterns and
densities of development, support new types and levels for diverse
affordable housing options, and create opportunities for parks and
other public spaces that reinforce the City---s physical identity
while also addressing existing community needs. This is an
experienced, professional level capable of carrying out most
assignments typical of the profession with limited guidance or
review. This level would be considered a promotional level and
attainable by any incumbents in a work group who demonstrate the
necessary knowledge, ability, and performance. Supervision Received
Direction received is very general, focuses on end results, and is
typically collaborative in nature. Candidate should be extremely
self-motivated and willing to take initiative. Essential Duties &
Responsibilities These are typical responsibilities for this
position and should not be construed as exclusive or all inclusive.
Other duties shall be performed as assigned. Design Review
Processes and Atlanta Urban Design Commission Activities. Act as
the lead Staff person for the Atlanta Urban Design Commission and
serve as the Commission---s Secretary under the supervision of the
Assistant Director. Coordinates the creation of the Commission---s
Agenda, minutes, and other documents required by City Code. Manage
the design review process including the assignment and distribution
of applications for review by other Staff. Using the City---s
historic preservation regulations, process and fully analyze design
review applications for private sector residential, commercial,
institutional, and mixed-use designs including neighborhood-focused
single-family and commercial, as well as high-profile, multi-phase
developments. Complete Staff-level design reviews for renovations,
maintenance work, and site work on all property types. Provide
design commentary for substantial City of Atlanta and Atlanta
Public School capital projects. Review proposed subdivisions for
compliance with the City---s historic neighborhood design criteria
in the Subdivision Ordinance. Provide design and regulatory
analysis to the Zoning Review Board, Board of Zoning Adjustment,
and SAP processes. Evaluate City public art installations and
installations of public art on private property. Manage public
engagement processes. Resolve community, applicant, and
inter-agency concerns, including enforcement of the historic
preservation regulations. Compliance with Federal Section 106
Regulations Complete Section 106 design reviews for housing
rehabilitation, commercial revitalization and demolition actions.
Advise City agencies on compliance with housing and community
development projects. Review a wide variety of project types /
construction documents for NRHP eligibility and compliance with
Secretary of the Interior Standards for Rehabilitation. Implement
programmatic/mitigation agreements on large scale individual
projects and multi-year federal programs. Respond, as needed, to
official information requests on behalf of the City. Preservation
Planning, Design, & Technical Assistance Programs Support the
designation of new Historic / Landmark districts and properties,
including interaction with property owners, communities, and public
officials. Revise historic preservation/design regulations. Provide
strategic and technical assistance to the City---s historic and
potentially historic neighborhoods and commercial areas. Advise
other City agencies and outside consultant teams on a full range of
preservation issues. Contribute to the success of the City---s
Atlanta City Design, Historic Revitalization Strategy,
Comprehensive Development Plan (CDP) and Capital Improvements
Program (CIP) processes. Participate in regional historic
preservation activities. Support National Register of Historic
Places (NRHP) nominations. Present the City---s historic
preservation programs and initiatives to a wide variety of
audiences, including elected officials and reviews boards. General
Office of Design / Departmental Programs Assist with the process of
establishing new zoning regulations for the City. Attend public
meetings as required such as the Neighborhood Planning Unit (NPU),
community association meetings, and meetings required for historic
preservation and urban design initiatives. Accept and intake
applications and questions from internal and external customers for
Historic Preservation related inquiries. Participate in planning
studies and reports in support of new and updated plans, programs
and regulations. Act as liaison between community groups,
government agencies, developers and elected officials related to
the City---s planning, development review, and historic
preservation functions. Provide information to the public regarding
development regulations. Assist in resolving citizen and customer
issues. Conduct field evaluations and assessments. Maintain
planning documents, codes and related regulations for research,
documentation and public access. Use GIS to prepare maps, graphics,
reports and related documents. Coordinate with the City Attorney,
building officials, Zoning Review Board, Board of Zoning Adjustment
and other public officials in matters relating to historic
preservation, urban design, general zoning and development in the
City. Decision Making Applies organizational policies. Establishes
work methods, timetables, performance standards, etc. Selects from
multiple procedures and methods to accomplish tasks. Leadership
Provided Serves as a technical resource and mentor to other
employees. May lead or instruct less experienced workers in high
level or technical tasks. Knowledge, Skills, And Abilities This is
a partial listing of necessary knowledge, skills, and abilities
required to perform the job successfully. It is not an exhaustive
list. Nationally accepted historic preservation principles and
concepts; historic preservation design guidelines and regulations;
federal historic preservation law and review procedures; the
National Register of Historic Places and its criteria; the
Secretary of Interior---s Standards for Rehabilitation.
Current/progressive concepts of historic preservation and urban
design; local government design review, zoning, and planning
procedures. GIS and how to prepare maps, graphics and reports;
spreadsheets, databases and software to help visualize and present
design projects. Planning and zoning, economic development and
related principles, methodologies, processes and practices.
Historic preservation and urban planning research methodology,
including field inspections, computer and electronic searches, and
archive and file searches. Principles and practices of
developmental design and engineering, including historic
preservation, architecture, landscape architecture, site design and
development, and land use compatibility. Oral communication and
interpersonal relationships to explain rules, procedures and
programs clearly to the public; creative problem-solving to gather
relevant information to solve vaguely defined practical problems;
and management of historic preservation planning and program
analysis projects. Read and interpret architectural and civil
engineering plans, city regulations, procedures, master plans,
regulatory codes, technical and operational documents, reports,
research material and information, and maps; analyze applications
and apply relevant regulatory ordinances and codes; operate and
maintain a GIS computer system. Prepare and present oral, written
and graphic reports, documents, brochures and pamphlets, maps, and
related historic preservation, general planning and development
documentation. Operate standard office equipment including a
personal computer using program applications appropriate to
assigned duties; communicate effectively; and establish and
maintain effective working relationships with the public,
customers, citizen groups and other employees.
Keywords: City of Atlanta, Sandy Springs , Urban Planner II - Historic Preservation, Other , Atlanta, Georgia
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