New York, NY (January 11, 2002) - We're surrounded by public spaces - streets, parks, markets, plazas, train stations - some we love and some we hate. Yet no one ever asks people what they think of the places that shape and influence their lives.
Project for Public Spaces, America's leading public spaces' nonprofit, has launched a website, Great Public Spaces, Great Community Places, (www.greatpublicspaces.org) that allows you to praise or damn the places you live in and visit, from Rockefeller Center's skating rink to your local watering hole.
"What makes it so awful? It's the nothing-ness you feel when you go by. The place is passive, cultureless and commercially bland." (McArthurGlen Designer Outlet, UK)
"With an aesthetic that might be dubbed 'dressed-up Home Depot', this building has no sense as a place in which one can do anything more than drive by blank walls." (The Central Library, San Antonio, TX)
"The old plaza exhibited the worst of Modernism's frosty attitude toward accommodating humans - its late '90s redesign is no better." (HUD Plaza, Washington, D.C)
World-renowned spaces such as New York's Grand Central Station and Edinburgh's Royal Botanic Gardens are assessed with the same "place" characteristics that are used on neighborhood parks and main streets.
And it is the lesser-known places that provoke the most passion: vibrant community gardens tendered by volunteers, obscure flea markets - and other treasures hidden within local neighborhoods.
"There is a pizza and bread-making oven, theatre, ice rink, playground, wading pool, baseball diamond, basketball court, chess, checkers, gardens, crafts for kids, card playing for older visitors, drop in center activities... and best of all, beautiful and abundant old shady trees." (Dufferin Grove Park, Toronto, Canada)
"At 5am each Saturday, over 20 vendors set up shop in a dilapidated shopping square, spreading out produce on blankets; live ducks, rabbits and chickens wail to a background chanting of Asian pop music." (Vietnamese Farmers' Market, New Orleans East, LA, U.S.)
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To browse the listings, chime in with your opinions, nominate a Great Public Space, or a contender for the Hall of Shame: www.greatpublicspaces.org
To find out more about Project for Public Spaces go to www.pps.org
To join the dicusssion about public spaces, sign up for the PPS listserve: www.topica.com/lists/public.spaces
or send an email to public.spaces-subscribe@topica.com
Project for Public Spaces provides resources, techniques and tools to help people build great public spaces. A nonprofit, PPS has helped over 1,000 neighborhoods in 46 states and 12 countries improve their parks, markets, streets, transit stations, libraries and countless other public spaces. PPS run training & education programs, sell publications and manage two websites: www.pps.org / www.urbanparks.pps.org.