[[wiki-architecture]] · [[Urban Planning and City Architecture]] · [[ARCHITECTURE]] · [[000]]
# Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance
An Adequate Public Facilities Ordinance (APFO, also known as a Concurrency Regulation) is an American legislative method to tie public infrastructure to growth for a region.
APFOs take into account the availability of infrastructure. They can manage growth, but are considered separate from growth controls such as building moratoria.
== History ==
Ramapo, New York (see Golden v. Planning Board of Ramapo); Petaluma, California; and Boulder, Colorado; were some of the early adopters of this tool in America. The state of Florida uses the term "concurrency" in its growth management act.
== Scope ==
APFO regulations are typically applied to a jurisdiction which has legislative control of a given area. In America, this can be at a state, county, or city level. A conflict can occur when APFO regulations differ in scope between jurisdictions where there is shared funding and legislative authority (such as a city located inside a county that funds schools). While APFOs are intended to mitigate infrastructure shortcomings for a particular area, the mitigation may apply to areas offsite of the development project. APFO regulations usually apply to individual projects on a case-by-case basis.
APFO regulations take into account some or all of a jurisdiction's infrastructure requirements, including:
Transportation
School facilities
Water supply
Water treatment
Roads
Other elements include:
CIP – Capitol Improvement Programs
Service Level Standards
== Criticism ==
Traditional opponents of APFO legislation include industries affected by moratoria or fees, including realtors, developers, and some Smart Growth advocates. Home costs for some locations that have enacted APFO have experienced increases in housing prices affecting affordable housing, in conjunction with positive effects of relief from school capacity shortcomings.
== See also ==
== References ==
- [[Professional Practice/Public & Cultural]]
- [[Urban and Planning/Public Space]]
- [[Professional Practice/Public & Cultural/Low Cost Construction]]
- [[Interior Architecture/Renovation and Conservation/Restoration Techniques]]
- [[Professional Practice/Client Management]]
- [[Digital Architecture/ePractice/GIS and Spatial Analysis]]
- [[Professional Practice/Construction Management/Site Management]]
- [[Environmental Design]]
- [[Design/Architectural Design/Architectural Styles and Movements]]
- [[Professional Practice/Ethics and Professional Conduct]]
== External links ==
An example of a Florida APFO regulation
Dolan v. City of Tigard – property rights