Private Partnerships Help Fund Public Parks

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Public-private partnerships are a key source of funding for parks, even in cities with generous park budgets.  “No matter how well funded a city’s parks are, they still need some help,” said Andy Wiley-Schwartz, vice president at Project for Public Spaces. “Having community stewards is priceless, and every city knows that, whether they fund parks or not.”





A More Sensitive Approach to Street Planning

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“Move more people, not vehicles.

Create better passageways that connect into existing roads rather than increase asphalt lanes.

Develop plans that are sensitive to existing roads, neighborhoods and land uses.

Above all: Include the public in conversations with engineers from the very beginning.

It seems simple enough, but the basic tenets of Context Sensitive Design are relatively new to transportation planners.”





January 24th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

A round peg sometimes does fit in a square hole

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“Inserting a tall building into a neighborhood of mostly two- to six-story buildings is a recipe for conflict. Where some see revitalization and an expanded tax base, others see architectural Armageddon: loss of human scale, more traffic and parking headaches, dark shadows on the streets.

But what if the lanky newcomer is shapely, not hulking?

What if it re-energizes a sagging business district and contributes to the long-term health of a neighborhood?”

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January 18th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

A New Plaza For Downtown Raleigh

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The central location and the expanse of space to facilitate a variety of different uses are getting people excited about the newly proposed City Plaza in downtown Raleigh, North Carolina, despite the fact that it will cut through a well-used street.

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January 18th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Waterfront Art Park To Open In Seattle

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

A public park and art space is set to open next week along Seattle’s waterfront, replacing a former brownfield site. The new Olympic Sculpture Park was created by the Seattle Art Museum, an expansion of which is set to open in May.

Image (c) Paul Warchol

Categories: Blog, Markets, Multi-Use, Parks, Places in the News
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January 17th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Farmers’ Markets Embody our Need for Connection and Community

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“Even as our farmland has been devoured by suburban sprawl, Californians have voted with their shopping bags to make farmers’ markets an increasingly ubiquitous element in big cities, small towns and, yes, even those suburbs that pave fields of vegetables. Beyond the showcase pavilion of San Francisco’s Ferry Building — an orgy of organic gourmet comestibles for the deep-pocketed foodie — more modest farmers’ markets have sprung up in the darnedest places, including the empty lot behind Target in Serramonte Plaza in Daly City and on the banks of the Russian River in the hamlet of Duncans Mills.”

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January 17th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Ugly Symbol of Highways as Usual in Hartford, CT

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The Connecticut Department of Transportation continues to put forward projects that are eyesores and disrupt communities without public involvement, according to Toni Gold’s commentary in the Hartford Courant.  While many transportation engineers are aware of  the ‘context sensitive solutions’ movement, CTDOT continues to build transportation projects without linking them to land use planning.

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January 12th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Making Hell’s Kitchen Less Hellish

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

PPS facilitated the first meeting of the Ninth Avenue Renaissance project in Hell’s Kitchen, New York, attended by over 130 members of the community. The project will focus on transforming Ninth Avenue from a traffic-choked, polluted highway, to a community-oriented Main Street.  Aaron Naparstek brings us his take on the meeting on Streetsblog.

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January 12th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Market Stallholders Challenge Superstores in Britain

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

“While it seems that “clone town Britain” is on the rise, with independent retailers slowly vanishing at the expense of supermarkets and chain stores, the market remains a feature of many city centres. However, their continuing presence has not been without a battle. With supermarkets offering convenient one-stop shopping, markets are beginning to suffer.”

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January 11th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Cities Reap Rewards for Decking Highways with Parks

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

U.S. cities are increasingly putting freeway segments underground and covering them with parkland. Whether called a lid, deck, bridge or tunnel, there are already some 20 highway parks in the country, several under construction — most notably, the Rose Kennedy Greenway park atop Boston’s Big Dig — and at least a dozen more in the planning pipeline. As urban auto impacts become less welcome, these decks have moved from the novel to the expected. Despite the sometimes considerable cost — as much as $500 per square foot — they are no longer classified as porkbarrel. They’ve been redefined as amenity investment with high economic payback.

Categories: Blog, Parks, Places in the News, Transportation
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January 9th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Hospitals Whose Layouts are Meant to Improve Care

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Hospital construction is booming in Philadelphia, using building layouts that scientists believe will help patients get healthier.

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January 9th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

San Diego Receives National Award from Partners for Livable Communities

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The City of San Diego will be honored with the Entrepreneurial American Community Award for the city’s 25 years of collaboration with Partners for Livable Places/San Diego on quality of life improvements and community building practices. This prestigious award will be presented by Washington, D.C.-based Partners for Livable Communities.

Fred Kent and Kathy Madden appear in a new DVD released by PLP, “The Thirty-Four Great Waterfronts of the World, and What San Diego May Learn From Them.”

Read the full press release and find out more about the DVD here.

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