Creating a Great Place in Covington, KY

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

PPS held a community workshop with 70 residents of Covington, KY, to explore possibilities for a site that is to become a public square.  The participants toured the site, and then brainstormed ideas for activites and programs that could occur there.  PPS Vice President Steve Davies said of the square, “The goal is to create a great place.”





Residents Ponder Future of Old Hilliard, OH

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

PPS conducted a community meeting in Hilliard, OH, to explore possibilities for the development and redevelopment of public spaces in the city.  The residents and attendees again and again turned the discussion to the plight of the city’s historic downtown business district, and what could be done about the lack of pedestrian activity in that area.





November 30th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Staying Mobile in America as we Add Millions

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“By 2043, we’re being told, there won’t just be 300 million of us — there will be 400 million. With the roadways around our metropolitan regions increasingly clogged, how will we ever stay mobile?

Depending on the tea leaves you choose, some vividly contrasting futures emerge.”

A commentary by Neal Peirce.

Categories: Blog, Places in the News, Transportation
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November 30th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

A Plan for a Farmers-Only Market in Toronto

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“Bob Chorney wants to put farmers back in farmers’ markets.

The executive director of Farmers’ Markets Ontario is tired of so-called “hucksters” who simply resell produce they’ve purchased wholesale and then pass it off as their own at markets — often undercutting the prices of career farmers.

So Chorney is pitching a certified market for Toronto next year that would be open only to farmers who grow their own goods, the first of its kind in Canada.”

Categories: Blog, Markets, Places in the News
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November 29th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

The World’s 6 Most Beautiful Train Stations

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

St. Pancras Station in London tops a list of the 6 most beautiful train stations in the world, chosen by Jonathan Glancey, Architecture Critic for The Guardian.

st_pancras.jpg

This image of St. Pancras (c) David Sillitoe, Guradian Unlimited

Categories: Blog, Places in the News, Transportation





November 29th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

San Diego’s Dedication to Public Space

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“What is the measure of a great city or urban region? Its education systems? Its arts? Its business inventiveness? All of the above. But the most overlooked measure is a city’s dedication to the public space.”

Categories: Blog, Parks, Places in the News
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November 28th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

The Suburbs Don’t Have to Be Boring

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

With a few changes, suburbs could be good places to live and interesting places to explore, writes Lawrence Cheek for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

Categories: Blog, Multi-Use, Places in the News
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November 27th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Edinburgh’s Farmers’ Market Rated Best in Britain

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“It boasts hot porridge doused in whisky, fresh ostrich meat, organic beers and hunks of wild boar, and it nestles under the battlements of one of the country’s most imposing castles. Welcome to the farmers’ market in Edinburgh, officially crowned as the best in Britain.

Now six years old, the Edinburgh market is one of the few in Britain to open every weekend. Its award from Country Life, to be handed over by the magazine’s editor, Mark Hedges, tomorrow, is the latest accolade. It has also been judged the UK’s best by the Farmers Retail and Markets Association (Farma), the national industry body.”

Categories: Blog, Markets, Places in the News





November 27th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

A Piazza for a Maryland Suburb

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Rockville’s new mixed-use downtown aims to avoid the ‘Anyplace U.S.A.’ look.

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





November 27th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Healthy Foods, Strong Communities

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Community groups and politicians are creating new strategies to bring fresh foods into low-income neighborhoods.

Categories: Blog, Markets, Places in the News
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November 22nd, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Must a Parking Garage Be an Architectural Disaster?

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

There was a golden age of motoring when the multi-storey car park was considered a symbol of pride and progress. But car parks are fast becoming symbols of our congested cities, our heavy carbon footprint, our dependency on oil; a civilisation that once embraced the motor car as an agent of liberation now feels a little sheepish about the whole affair.

Categories: Blog, Places in the News
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November 20th, 2006 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Build a Better Downtown: Design Competitions Leave Too Many Good Ideas Out of the Mix

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“The shape of downtown Los Angeles is still in our hands because we are a young city and have room to grow, even at the core. At the same time, the city has an unmatched record of missing opportunities to become its own place.

On Friday, the state announced Hargreaves Associates as the winner of a design competition for a park at the Cornfield — 32 acres of land north of Chinatown. The proposal is thoughtful and interesting, though constrained by the rules of the competition.

But what the Cornfield competition really points out is how infrequently we are choosing from the best available options, some of which may lie outside the limits of a narrowly conceived exercise.”

Categories: Blog, Downtowns, Places in the News