CT Governor Acts To Stop Sprawl

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

CT Governor Jodi Rell issued an executive order creating a state office to control sprawl and promote more sensible and sustainable growth.

The Hartford Courant cheered the move, with some caveats, in this editorial.

PPS Senior Associate Toni Gold also asks whether the move is a meaningful one in her commentary, “Smart Growth or a Fig Leaf?”





Good Management Recommended for Downtown Pittsburgh’s Market Square

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Attentive management — not major redesign — is what’s needed to help Downtown’s beleaguered Market Square develop into a place where people want to spend time.

That was the consensus that the Project for Public Spaces presented at the Harris Theater on Tuesday, after six weeks of soliciting input from Pittsburghers and studying the historic, single-acre site sandwiched between PPG Place and the west end of Forbes Avenue.

“Ninety percent of success in public spaces is about management,” said Fred Kent, President of the New York-based group. “Lots of cities create spaces but don’t manage them.”

Photo (c) Jasmine Gehris/Pittsburgh Tribune-Review





October 19th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Cynthia Nikitin on Reclaiming Cities for People: CBC Radio Interview

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Cynthia Nikitin, Vice President of Project for Public Spaces and Director of the Civic Centers Program, discusses the importance of involving the community in revitalizing cities and neighborhoods, on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Categories: Blog, Downtowns, Multi-Use, Parks, Project Updates
Tags: ,





October 19th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Cynthia Nikitin on Reclaiming Cities for People: CBC Radio Interview

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Cynthia Nikitin, Vice President of Project for Public Spaces and Director of the Civic Centers Program, discusses the importance of involving the community in revitalizing cities and neighborhoods, on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Categories: Blog, Downtowns, Multi-Use, Places in the News
Tags: ,





October 18th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Houston Downtown Park Groundbreaking: “Discovery Green”

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The Houston Downtown Park Conservancy held a Groundbreaking Ceremony and name announcement for Houston’s new Downtown Park on October 17, 2006. The project will transform an area that is currently underused green space and parking lots into an oasis for Downtown Houston.  PPS worked with the Conservancy and the community in 2005 to develop a program of uses for the new park, to ensure that it will become a major attraction for Downtown Houston, and the region. The Conservancy held a contest to name the new park, and “Discovery Green” was chosen from over 6,000 entries.

A promenade in Discovery Green

For more on PPS’ work with the new Downtown Park, visit our project experience page.

Categories: Blog, Parks, Project Updates
Tags:





October 16th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Study Shows Cost Savings of Suburbs are an Illusion

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“One of the lures of the outer suburbs is more house — maybe even one with a big yard — for less money. But a new study shows that the savings are illusory: The costs of longer commutes are so high that they can outweigh the cheaper mortgage payments.

A study of Washington and 27 other metropolitan areas by the Center for Housing Policy found that the costs of one-way commutes of as little as 12 to 15 miles — roughly the distance between Gaithersburg and Bethesda — cancel any savings on lower-priced outer-suburban homes.”

Categories: Blog, Places in the News
Tags:





October 16th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Buildings Schools in the Right Places

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Where schools are built can have a major impact on the character and growth of a community. With a push from state education officials, communities are consolidating small schools and building new ones near town centers. This is a welcome change.”

Categories: Blog, Places in the News
Tags: ,





October 16th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Smart Growth for CT, Or A Fig Leaf?

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Toni Gold, a Senior Associate of Project for Public Spaces, applauds CT Governor Rell’s establishment of an Office of Responsible Growth, and also asks if the move is a sufficient step towards meaningful smart growth policies.

Categories: Blog, Project Updates, Transportation
Tags:





October 13th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

$15M Gift Paves Way for Indianapolis Cultural Trail

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The Indianapolis Cultural Trail, a pedestrian-and-bike path linking Downtown cultural districts, will take a big leap forward today with the announcement of a $15 million donation allowing construction to begin next year.

PPS looked at cities and trails around the world and helped the project team work through design, engineering and programmatic issues, encouraging the city to build an on-street bicycle network to compliment the trail, and think of the entire street as a public space. Andy Wiley-Schwartz, Vice President of PPS, said of the trail, “There’s nothing really exactly like it.” The closest thing in the United States is in Boulder, Colo., where a bike-and-walk trail system was developed in the downtown area, he said.

Categories: Blog, Project Updates, Transportation
Tags:





October 13th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Fashion Show will Stay in Bryant Park for Now

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Mayor Michael Bloomberg announced that while Fashion Week events have outgrown Bryant Park, more time is needed to find another home. The Mayor stepped in and reserved the Park for Fashion Week in February, 2007, rather than allowing a public ice skating rink to remain open throughout the winter months.

Categories: Blog, Parks, Places in the News
Tags:





October 10th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Youths’ Businesses Bloom at Farmers Market

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The farmers market in Carlisle (MA) is an example of how markets can become an incubator for creative products and marketing ideas hatched by youths.

Because farmers markets are less bureaucratic and less strictly regulated than other sales venues, they provide an ideal venue for young people to try out their sales and marketing skills.

Categories: Blog, Markets, Places in the News
Tags:





October 10th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Position Available: Transportation and Placemaking Project Manager,

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

PPS is seeking a Transportation and Placemaking Project Manager in its transportation line of business. Candidates should have experience in several of the following areas: transportation and land use planning and/or policy, TOD, transportation facility design, public participation and facilitation, community development, redevelopment and real estate development market analysis. The selected candidate will report to the Vice President for Transportation and work with other VPs, project associates and interns on a range of planning, research, and marketing projects, including land and community development projects and general and specific plans for communities, cities and counties.

Read more about this position at: http://www.pps.org/info/aboutpps/jobopenings

Categories: Blog, Campuses, Downtowns, Markets, Multi-Use, Parks, Project Updates, Transportation
Tags: , , , ,