Kathy Madden is an environmental designer who has been at PPS since its inception in 1975. During this time, Kathy has been involved in all aspects of the organization's work. She has directed numerous research and urban design project along with training programs throughout the U.S and abroad.
In addition to managing over 300 projects throughout the U.S and abroad - from major urban design plans, to small-scale design and streetscape improvements to parks, plazas, central squares, and transit facilities, she is currently directing PPS’s Placemaking Training and Public Space Research and Publications programs.
Kathy has co-authored and written books and articles, including the PPS best-selling publication How to Turn a Place Around, which has now been translated into Czech and Japanese. She has lectured extensively and conducts, in conjunction with other PPS staff, PPS's semi-annual How to Turn a Place Around training program in New York. While at PPS she taught for six years at the Pratt School of Architecture Graduate Program in Urban Design.
In 1995, Kathy started the Urban Parks Institute with a $2.2 million grant from the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Fund. The Institute brought together over 2,000 parks leaders from both the private and public sectors in eight national conferences and four regional workshops. The Institute produced a volume of research and publications related to urban parks, and created a major online resource center for urban parks best practices and research, Urban Parks Online, which attracts over one million page views annually.
Prior to working at PPS, Kathy worked at the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies and at the New York City Parks Department where she conducted an evaluation of park equipment and street furniture.
University of Minnesota, Bachelor of Arts in Design, Marketing and Advertising
Parsons School of Design, Bachelor of Fine Arts in Environmental Design
Urban Design Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, May 2005
Mid South Planning and Zoning Institute, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, April 2005
Experts In Residence Program, Battle Creek, MI, April 2005
Greenspace Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, February 2005
Scottish Executive Committee, Edinburgh, Scotland, February 2005
Great Parks, Great Cities, London, UK, July, 2004
Iowa ASLA Annual Conference, Des Moines, IA, May, 2004
Guest Speakers Series, South Bend, IN, May 2004
Texas ASLA Annual Conference, Dallas, TX, April 2004
International Congress in Management of Urban Parks, Terrassa, Spain, April 2003
"One Day, Two Paris Parks," Landscape Architecture, February 2006
"Five Ways to a Great Place," Yes! Magazine, Summer 2005
"Public Parks, Private Partners," Project for Public Spaces 2001
"How to Turn a Place Around," Project for Public Spaces 2001
"Creating Places that Work," Planning Commissioners Journal, Summer 2001
"Streets vs. Malls: The Modern Dilemma of Urban Public Spaces," Los Angeles Times, December 4, 1994.
"A Cry for Community," Planning Commissioners Journal, Fall 1994
Streetscape: A Guide to the Design and Management of Pedestrian Amenities in Downtowns and Neighborhood Commercial Districts, Project for Public Spaces, Inc., 1987
User Analysis: An Approach to Park Planning and Management, American Society of Landscape Architects, l983
Film in User Analysis, National Park Service, l979