U.S. Cities Building More Parks and Public Spaces

Posted by: joshkent

As cities are building new parks at a rate not seen for 100 years, the debate about what uses and activities to put in them is growing.

Phil Myrick, a PPS Vice President, comments on how PPS helped create a program of uses for a new park in Houston that will generate buzz in a long-forgotten area of downtown, in this article from the Wall Street Journal.





Winners of Jane Jacobs Medal Announced

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

After funding the research that helped Jane Jacobs produce her landmark book “The Death and Life of Great American Cities” nearly 50 yeas ago, the Rockefeller Foundation has inaugurated the first Jane Jacobs Medals.

Barry Benepe, the 79-year-old founder of Greenmarket, will receive the first medal for “lifetime leadership.” Omar Freilla, the 33-year-old founder of Green Worker Cooperatives in the Bronx, was named the winner of the first medal for “new ideas and activism.”

The medals will be presented in September in conjunction with the opening by the Municipal Art Society of an exhibit titled “Jane Jacobs and the Future of New York.”





June 28th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Returning Streets to People, Not Cars, in Bogota, Colombia

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Bogota, Colombia, has turned itself around by focusing on using the public realm to promote the greatest amount of happiness. First stop? Car-free days. The city’s campaign to return streets from cars to people is now a model for the world.

Categories: Blog, Downtowns, Places in the News, Transportation
Tags: ,





June 28th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Study Criticizes NYC Parks Dept. Management

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The quality of the typical New York City park is determined largely by whether it is in a wealthy or poor neighborhood, according to a study to be released by a private nonprofit group today. The report also indicated that despite budget increases in recent years, the Parks Department is not doing enough strategic planning to manage its parkland properly.

“About one of eight parks citywide is not in acceptable condition, and there is a significant correlation between a community district’s share of parks in unacceptable condition and its average income level,” according to the report by the group, the Citizens Budget Commission.

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





June 26th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Occidental Square Making a Comeback

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Seattle’s Occidental Square is making a comeback!

The square had long been an empty, dreary, underused space.  But recent renovations have brought new pavings, bocce ball courts, and a series of special events that are bringing people back to Occidental Square.

Read more about PPS’s involvement in the turnaround.

Photo taken by Dan Gonsiorowski
Seattlest recently visited the square on a sunny afternoon.

Categories: Blog, Parks, Project Updates
Tags: ,





June 26th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

University of Calgary West Campus Plans Unveiled

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The master plan for the development of University of Calgary’s West Campus was revealed at two open houses.  Bill Chomik, principal architect, said “It will be very mixed-use–everything will be there and it will have the flavour of a university town.”

Categories: Blog, Campuses, Places in the News





June 26th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Bike Activists Paint Their Own Bike Lanes

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

After Toronto’s plan to add bike lanes falls behind schedule, cycling activists paint their own bike lanes.

“The city is taking way too long…Why don’t they just paint the bike lanes? People are dying.”

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





June 20th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Free the Bench! Mock Trial over Bench in Surrey, BC

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

Local politicians – lawyers among them – will be staging a mock trial Saturday on whether to set free a wooden bench near the Surrey Central SkyTrain and bus loop in Surrey, British Columbia.

The idea for the bench trial came about after public spaces guru Fred Kent, President of Project for Public Spaces, toured Whalley and spotted the bench, encaged by an iron fence, and marveled at the waste.

Categories: Blog, Downtowns, Project Updates, Transportation
Tags: ,





June 20th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Presidents and Architecture

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

FDR shaped the Pentagon, and two of the founding fathers were amateur architects who built their own residences.  Why haven’t more presidents taken an interest in architecture?

Categories: Blog, Places in the News
Tags:





June 20th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Competing Visions for NYC’s Governors Island

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

The five proposals for Governors Island hold clues to what’s right and wrong about how public space is designed.

“All five concepts are thoughtful approaches to a complex design problem. And the emphasis on public space is reassuring; responses to the agency’s earlier requests for proposals typically included more commercial development. But the five plans still fall short of the sweeping ambition such a unique parcel of undeveloped public land in New York City should inspire. We are mostly left with good intentions.”

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





June 19th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Hong Kong’s Street Markets at Risk

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

While neighborhood farmer’s markets are all the rage in the U.S., redevelopment officials in Hong Kong are making plans to raze of the city’s oldest open-air food markets — which is falling victim to gentrification.  Learn more here.

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





June 19th, 2007 | Go to Placemaking Blog Home

Caring for New York City’s Emerging Waterfront Parks and Public Spaces

Posted by: ksalay@pps.org

New York City’s tremendous success in revitalizing its waterfront will require about $ 100 million a year to meet new management and operating needs, according a new report by Regional Plan Association.  Close to 700 acres and 58 miles of new waterfront parks, greenways and other public spaces are being created in all five boroughs.  To ensure that this legacy is well maintained and managed in the public interest, the Association has recommended more than a dozen specific policy recommendations to ensure that responsible public agencies have the resources and authority to take a primary stewardship role.

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