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Halifax-Dartmouth Centre Plan draft expected by December 2016

The plan, which has been in the works since 2006, touches on everything from the height of buildings, to transit options, to municipal parks. It will be used to update existing rules and regulations that have been in place since the late 1970s.

The design manual focuses on what the area will look like for the next generation

The green parts of this map show the areas that would be affected by the Centre Plan. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

A draft of the Centre Plan a design manual to shape peninsular Halifax and Dartmouth within the CircumferentialHighway is expected by the end of 2016.

Jacob Ritchie, the urban design manager with the municipality, says planners expect to have a draft of the Centre Plan to show to regional council by the end of the year. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

The plan, which has been in the works since 2006,touches on everything from the height of buildings, to transit options, to municipal parks. It will be used to update existing rules and regulations that have beenin place since the late 1970s.

Municipal planners hosted an open house about the Centre Plan at Alderney Landing in Dartmouth Monday night. Attendees were encouraged to write suggestions on stickynotes that will be reviewed before the draft is presented to council in December.

Community planning

"This is about updating ... bringing the current community into the planning process,"saidJacobRitchie, the manager ofurban designforthe municipality.

"What wesee from people a little concerned is that they're not quite sure what's happening in their neighbourhoods, they're not quite sure the development that's coming in is what they expected and they would like a little more help understanding how we go about doing that work," he said.

Attendees were encouraged to write about community issues most important to them on sticky notes. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

Tom Emodi, a Halifax resident who works forTEAL Architects, says he's looking forward to one day having a solidified Centre Plan.

"If the process can be streamlined and the land use bylaws and other regulations can be simplified and made open and transparent and the timelines can be predictable, it would help everybody," said Emodi.

"It would help the landowners and the developers and the professionals working on projects and it would help the city a lot.

Room for improvement, variety

Matthew Burke stopped into the open house on his way home to Dartmouth.

He left a sticky noteabout improving transit connections tooutlying communities.

"The communities are designed around you're going to have a car," said Burke."That causes all sorts of problems with pollution and dividing communities."

The open house for the Centre Plan was held at Alderney Landing in Dartmouth. (Anjuli Patil CBC)

Glynis Mullen, who'slived in downtown Dartmouth for 19 years, says she would like to see improvements on Wyse Road.

"Wyse Road is not a very attractive commercial area. I think we could do a lot there to bring people in," she said.

"I think mostly some updating and something to attract some different kind of stores rather than groceries and liquor stores and Tim Hortons. We have three of those on one block."