Sunday, December 30, 2012

From Project for Public Spaces
Best of the Blog: Top 12 PPS Posts of 2012

2012 was a big year in general here at PPS—and the same was true for the Placemaking Blog! Here's a round-up of the top posts from the past year, organized by popularity.  See anything you missed?? More at: Project for Public Spaces | Best of the Blog: Top 12 PPS Posts of 2012

Thursday, December 27, 2012

From UrbanPeek.com — Picture of the Day: Central Park Panorama



Russian photographer Sergey Semenov captured this great panoramic shot of Central Park in New York, moreover he got the EPSON International Pano Awards 2012 (Panoramic Photography Competition) as Major Amateur Winner and as Amateur Award – Built Environment (including architecture and landscape). His art keeps your eyes interested in details of the picture and your mind busy with “how did he make this shot?” question.

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

From changingcitybook.com
Imouto (“little sister") House, Vancouver’s First Shipping Container Housing Will Create 12 Units for Women Aged 55+

Right now, Imouto House looks like a stack of shipping containers that somebody took a cutting torch to. That’s because it is exactly that; Vancouver’s first recycled shipping container based housing project will create 12 units of housing for Atira Women’s Resource Society. Imouto will in part provide housing for women aged 55+ living in shelters or SRO rooms. Imouto is the Japanese word for “little sister”and was chosen because the building in located in Japantown, kitty corner from the Vancouver Japanese Language School.

The first containers were lifted into position in late November, and the Barry McGinn designed project is expected to complete for April 1st after a week-long open house for the public. Each unit will be 320 sq ft, with its own kitchen, bathroom and laundry, and construction is quite a bit cheaper than traditional methods coming in at under $100,000 a unit.


Imouto House – Alexander Street | Changing City Updates

Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Monday, December 17, 2012

From copenhagenize.com
85 Years of Traffic Engineering Revolving Around the Car Has Failed Miserably

Mikael Colville-Andersen: Engineers are brilliant problem solvers. They just need to be told which problems to solve. They are rarely leaders. They are the Can Do team. If we design a city properly, they will make it work. But as it is now, we are living in The Matrix, because traffic engineering goes unchecked and unctriticised. 

“Almost 35,000 people are killed in car accidents on our roads” @copenhagenize on harsh realities of North American and European car cultures. Bicycle Culture by Design: Mikael Colville-Andersen at TEDxZurich

Sunday, December 16, 2012

From Project for Public Spaces
In Praise of the Zealous Nut!

The way that public spaces were being conceived and designed [almost four decades ago] was disconnected from the reality of how people used them, yet there was surprisingly little resistance. Today, in contrast, we are witnessing a convergence of advocates, activists, fathers, mothers, citizens, neighbors, friends — those we call the “zealous nuts” — all coming together around the idea of place.


Looking Back on 2012…and On to 2013, the Year of the Zealous Nut! | Project for Public Spaces

Friday, December 14, 2012

Thursday, December 13, 2012

From TED Blog — A Community Center Built by the Community Wins City 2.0 Award

The Klong Toey Community Lantern — a community space in the oldest and largest of Bangkok’s slums — was built very quickly. Not quite as quickly as shown in this three-minute timelapse video, but construction for the project took just three weeks thanks to the help of the community. But while construction went fast, Norwegian architects Yashar Hanstad and Andreas Gjertsen — of the firm TYIN tegnestue Architects – took six months to design the space. They conducted interviews with Klong Toey residents and held public workshops to find out exactly what the 140,000 person community — which struggles with rampant unemployment, drug use and substandard housing — needed. The goal was to create a safe oasis for community members of all ages to play and congregate. 

Read more: TED Blog | A community center, built by the community, wins City 2.0 award 

Wednesday, December 12, 2012

From Kaid Benfield's Blog
The Ten Steps of Walkability

In Jeff Speck’s excellent new book, Walkable City, he suggests that there are ten keys to creating walkability. Most of them also have something to do with redressing the deleterious effects caused by our allowing cars to dominate urban spaces for decades. I don’t necessarily agree with every detail, and my own list might differ in some ways that reflect my own experience and values. But it’s a heck of a good menu to get city leaders and thinkers started in making their communities more hospitable to walkers.

Read more: 
The ten steps of walkability | Kaid Benfield's Blog | Switchboard, from NRDC

From The Atlantic Cities
What It Really Takes to Foster an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem

RICHARD FLORIDA Innovation and entrepreneurship are the engines of economic growth. For decades now, cities and communities across the United States have tried to infuse themselves with those two properties by emulating Silicon Valley, a never-ending quest to become the next Silicon Somewhere. Brad Feld’s terrific new book, Startup Communities, takes us inside the real ecologies of innovation and entrepreneurship. Feld, co-founder of venture capital firm Foundry Group, serves on the boards of numerous high-tech companies. He recently chatted with Cities about his new book.

Read more: What It Really Takes to Foster an Entrepreneurial Ecosystem - Technology - The Atlantic Cities

Monday, December 10, 2012

Promenade, Garonne River, Toulouse

South of France Autumn light through the Plane Trees along the Garonne River. Picture by my friend Jenny, now living in Toulouse. Exquisite public space. Look how the walkway along the river's edge isn't lined with railings as it would be here in North America. "Street wall" of 2-3 stories set well back. Appears about 25% of the space is for car use. 75% pedestrian and bikes, seems about right.

From Witold Rybczynski's Blog
Films Starring Architecture

... Roman Polanski’s 1966 film Cul-de-Sac. Lionel Stander and Donald Pleasance are first-rate, but they share star billing with Lindisfarne Castle, which is the location of this one-setting film. Lindisfarne is a sixteenth-century castle that was restored and converted into a country retreat by Sir Edwin Lutyens, whose austere architecture contributes greatly to the tense atmosphere of the film. It reminded me how few movie director’s have exploited outstanding architecture.

Sunday, December 9, 2012

From StreetFilms.org
The High Cost of Free Parking

In some city neighborhoods, cruising [in search of a parking spot] makes up as much as 40 percent of all traffic. All this unnecessary traffic slows down buses, endangers cyclists and pedestrians, delays other motorists, and produces harmful emissions. The key to eliminating it is to get the price of parking right... says UCLA Urban Planning Prof Donald Shoup. Part of StreetFilms.org series Moving Beyond the Automobile
 
MBA: The Right Price for Parking from Streetfilms on Vimeo.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

From StrongTowns.org — A Project Engineer Explains Street Improvements to a Resident

A resident has a conversation with a project engineer about the proposed improvements to her street. http://www.youtube.com/user/strongtowns

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

From CBC BC — Pedestrian Deaths
Dominate Vancouver Traffic Fatalities

"The records show in each of the past five years, more pedestrians have been killed in Vancouver than drivers, passengers, cyclists, and motorcyclists combined."


It seems increasingly clear that it will take a court challenge to force cities and their Planners and Traffic Engineers to design streets safe and accessible for all. This vast and expensive public space has to be reclaimed and they won't be doing voluntarily. As drivers, we make an implicit agreement: I'll go along with it as long as it's somebody else's grandparent or teenager killed.

Reposted from Blinking City
Ho-Yeol Ryu Time-lapse Photography
Planes Taking off From Hannover Airport


Time-lapse photography of planes taking off From Hannover Airport by the Korean artist Ho-Yeol Ryu.  

Reposted from: http://blinkingcity.tumblr.com/post/37185215923/i-cant-say-how-much-i-like-this-time-lapse

And...a companion piece:

Landings at San Diego Int Airport Nov 23, 2012 from Cy Kuckenbaker on Vimeo.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Monday, December 3, 2012

A Flâneur Around False Creek

At last, this week, an opportunity to wander False Creek and in particular the new neigbourhood  on its south shore, the Athlete's Village. As a Vancouver expat it's quite an experience to descend from the Canada Line station in Yaletown and travel under False Creek (!) and connect with the new Village neighbourhood that has had such well documented birthing pains. 

Both North (where I have had opportunity to explore over the last couple of years) and South False Creek neighbourhoods are distinguished by terrific attention to public space. Especially a delight it seems to me in the now established NEFC is the attention to the smaller public spaces that link the street grid with the sea wall and parks and playing fields. Evidently these were successfully negotiated with the developer, mainly Concord Pacific and where a condo tower blocks access to the seawall with "private property" notices, you really appreciate these charming squares and small parks. In contrast to the Village, these spaces have an old-world formality which contributes a groomed and ordered neighbourhood atmosphere.

The public space in the new Village neighbourhood by comparison is wild and wooly — and wet, featuring a swampy wetland area quite popular with ducks. As you enter from the west you pass a community garden — "No picking. Please respect our food" — and a wonderfully chaotic enclosed dog run — from a Great Dane to a silly little thing that would fit in a purse and every size and variety in between and owners visting and trying to maintain some sort of order.  The peaceful formality of the north shore is welcome, but the public space and landscaping in the Village creates a distinctive, earthy ambience.

The main square is now enlivened by an upscale food store, brew pub, drug store and cafe, anchored by the Salt building restoration.

From Wired — Strange, Beautiful and Unexpected: Planned Cities Seen From Space

Strange, Beautiful and Unexpected: Planned Cities Seen From Space | Wired Science | Wired.com

Saturday, December 1, 2012

From CBC Radio Ideas
Cornelia Hahn Oberlander
The Grande Dame of Green Design

Cornelia Hahn Oberlander is this country's pre-eminent landscape architect. Her love of nature and respect for the environment has guided and inspired her work from the grounds of the National Gallery in Ottawa to the Museum of Anthropology in Vancouver. IDEAS producer Yvonne Gall profiles the 91-year-old icon, whose career spans six decades and is still going strong.

Brent Toderian in The Atlantic Cities
6 Ideas Every City Should
Steal From Barcelona

Frank Murphy photo
BRENT TODERIAN
Spain may be facing significant economic and political challenges these days, but Barcelona's city-building remains one of the best models in the world. Few cities inspire my thinking more.

Thus it was a fitting location for the second Global Smart City Expo/Congress, and my invitation to speak was a good excuse to return, and share some of the best "steal-able" lessons. The Congress may have talked a lot about urban technologies, but Barcelona reminds us how smart the fundamentals are when it comes to making great cities.  Read more: 6 Ideas Every City Should Steal From Barcelona - Design - The Atlantic Cities

Thursday, November 29, 2012

From The Atlantic Cities — 4 Reasons
Retailers Don't Need Free Parking to Thrive

A major rationale for the supply of parking spaces in city shopping centers is that customers won't come without them. The anecdotal argument makes sense — retailers believe that most consumers arrive by car and believe free or cheap parking plays a major role in choosing a destination — but the actual evidence is scant at best. A new review of commercial centers in Greater London, released late last month (via David King), concludes that retailers vastly overestimate the role free parking plays in their success.

Mike Klassen in the Courier
Give Neighbourhoods the Tools for Change

Community activism, creativity alive and 
well in Mountain View...

Friday, November 23, 2012

It's Just a Small Sign. But...

It's just a sign. This is what it says:

PRIVATE DRIVEWAY
NO PUBLIC ACCESS OR PARKING

This is where it is: the sparkling newly restored heritage train station in my downtown neighbourhood. 

Seems simple enough. Driveway is for the private use of who I'm not sure and the general public is to stay away from this area. But beneath the simplicity some large questions and concerns emerge.

Brief background: the E&N Train Station has sat derelict, damaged by fire, for years until a number of public initiatives combined to oversee its restoration. The station is owned by the Island Corridor Foundation.  The foundation is made up of municipalities and First Nations along the rail line between Victoria and the Comox Valley and across to Port Alberni. Their ambitious goal is to raise the $100+ million it will take to repair the rail bed and trestles and restore passenger rail service to the Island. The last "dayliner" cars were removed a year ago. 


To understand my concerns about one little sign, it's necessary to have a sense of this particular neighbourhood and its unique characteristics. Unlike other much less densely populated neighbourhoods in Nanaimo, it's not designed around the needs of our automobiles. It's a medium density inner city neighbourhood that is more diverse across demographic categories than its surrounding more suburban 'hoods. It is walkable and I like to point out that with the exception of a Keg restaurant its lively healthy shopping streets don't include a single franchise or a national chain. These are owner operated shops. Merchants and investors many of whom also live in the neighbourhood.

Here's my first inquiry to the owners of the train station, the Island Corridor Foundation:

Subject: Nanaimo station
Date: 1 November, 2012 3:25:02 PM PDT
To: Islandrail@shaw.ca
Cc: info@ypnanaimo.com, corry@dnbia.ca

I've followed with much interest your work on the rail corridor and in particular the resurrection of the Selby St station. (I live directly across the street and it's a terrific contribution to this neighbourhood and city. I was able involve my neighbourhood association in support of the project and worked with the Downtown BIA folks on their involvement as well.) 

This morning I was glad to see parking has been removed from the terrace that extends from Selby to the rear of the site. However a new sign that's been posted really took me back. It seems to send such an unfortunate and I'm sure unintentional message. It identifies the site as private property. While I understand it is owned by the Island Corridor Foundation, I consider it an accomplishment of public entities working together. It is in every way but perhaps a narrow legal one public space. That the sign announces "No Public Access" mystifies me and I wonder if you could offer some explanation. I imagine there might be legal issues at the heart of this but there must be a solution superior to the one that tells people to stay away.

Thanks for giving this some attention when you have a minute.

Frank Murphy
www.thesidewalkballet.com

…and the response I received:

Hi Frank,

There have been some concerns with the daycare next door so we are trying to make things safer. Once the trail is complete we will look at changing the language on the sign.

Sincerely,

Jenn K. George
Office Administrator
Island Corridor Foundation
Office: 250-754-7254
Cell: 250-701-8381
islandrail@shaw.ca

...and a follow-up on Nov 6:


Subject: Re: Nanaimo station
Date: 6 November, 2012 4:28:44 PM PST
To: "Island Corridor Foundation"
Cc: ChrisChris.Sholberg@nanaimo.ca, info@ypnanaimo.com, corry@dnbia.ca

Thanks for getting back to me Jenn. I guess to understand your answer I'd have to know the nature of the daycare's concerns and how the sign addresses them and also how the completion of the trail impacts the language on the sign. Anyway if you could supply some more background that would be great but in the meantime good for you for registering the concerns of the daycare. I hope you'll also register this concern from the neighbourhood that the language on the sign sends a negative and disappointing message.

Frank

The daycare mentioned is part of the new Immigrant Welcome Centre. Both the Centre and the Station restoration and the Irish Pub-style restaurant it includes, are very welcome and positive additions to my neighbourhood. In adjusting to their new neighbourhood apparently the Immigrant Welcoming Centre has expressed some worries that rise from people crossing this terrace. The use of this space for parking has become, not surprisingly problematic. The response has been this sign and I want to make the case that in sending a cold and off-putting message to the new neighbourhood that the Train Station is of course wanting to fit in to, it sends a very negative message and doesn't provide solutions to the perceived problems. 

I want to suggest a better solution:

The area in question is not for parking cars. I attended City of Nanaimo Design Advisory Panel meetings early in the process and questioned why there was need for access along here at all and learned it was considered essential for emergency and maintenance vehicles. I heard no reference to supplying parking stalls in this space. There's been such delightful attention to heritage detail in this project it seems all the more a shame to default any available square footage to parking cars. I was unable to attend later DAP meetings but I'd be very surprised to learn that the landscaping plan included a parking lot or a "driveway". It's understood that the area is not for public parking. Now consider that it of course is also not for private parking. Has the area been leased for private use? I and I think the City would be surprised and would object. 

Solution to the parking related issues: recognize that this space was never intended to park cars. The sign is not needed at all. What is needed is simply adjustable bollards across the Selby Street entrance. Full access for emergency and maintenance vehicles and ease of access for wheelchairs and bikes. Badly needed open public space is added to the Station's new neighbourhood that sends the message: we're happy to be here.

The other issue concerns the daycare part of the Immigrant Welcome Centre. I would be very concerned and would want to do anything I could to help if I thought that they are in the slightest uncomfortable in my neighbourhood. One of the very best characteristics of a diverse, dynamic inner city neighourhood is our comfortable sidewalk level interaction with each other. We don't as Toronto Chief Planner Jennifer Keesmaat tells her daughter when they talk about walking to school "...as a family we won't enter the world based on fear." Let's confront the concerns of the IWC and bring any and all resources to bear aleviate any concerns they may have and make sure they know they're very welcome in this Old City neighbourhood.


From the Downtown Urban Design Plan and Guidelines:

Define train station with adjacent buildings to minimum front setback. Install distinctive paving on
Selby Street and provide new landscaping and trees around existing station.



From RDG Planning & Design
High Trestle Trail Bridge Artistic Elements

The High Trestle Bridge, located along the High Trestle Trail between Woodward and Madrid, Iowa... spans the Des Moines River Valley and serves as a link in the 25 miles of paved High Trestle Trail. Read more: From Here to There: High Trestle Trail Bridge Artistic Elements :: RDG Planning & Design

Thursday, November 22, 2012

From Price Tags
A Multimodal Marvel in Portland

If you want to get a sense of how extraordinary the City of Portland has become … well, you can go to Pioneer Courthouse Square, one of the great urban spaces in North America. At certain times, there will be a light-rail train on three sides, and on the fourth, a few blocks away, the Portland Streetcar. But if you want to see what Portland is becoming – and to watch the interactions where five modes of transport come together – Read more at PriceTags: A Multimodal Marvel in Portland « Price Tags

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Brent Toderian in Planetizen
The Law of Traffic Congestion,
According to "The Flash!"

Across the world, city-builders who understand the complex relationship between land-use, car infrastructure and road congestion, struggle to communicate it in a simple way that resonates with the public. It's now well-demonstrated in transportation demand management (TDM) research and practice that you can't build your way out of traffic congestion by building roads, and in fact the opposite is true - the more free-ways and car lanes you build, the more people drive and the more congestion and other negative results there are. This because of "induced traffic", or the Law of Congestion. As the saying goes, building more lanes to address congestion is like loosening your belt to address obesity. 


Read more: The Law of Traffic Congestion, according to "The Flash!" | Planetizen

Friday, November 16, 2012

From Project for Public Spaces
“We Are the Majority! The Cars Don’t Vote!”

Thanks to Clarence at Streetfilms for the heads up on this: the impassioned presentation by transportation reform leader Mark Gorton during this fall’s Pro Walk/Pro Bike: Pro Place conference in Long Beach is now available in full online.

More at Project for Public Spaces“We Are the Majority! The Cars Don’t Vote!” | Project for Public Spaces

Thursday, November 15, 2012

From WhatWasThere — 1917 Car Wreck

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Traffic Signals Removed,
All Traffic Shares the Intersection

 Shared space traffic intersection in Drachten, The Netherlands. Traffic signals removed in 2002. The junction handles around 17,000 vehicles per day. One of many projects led by the late Hans Monderman.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

From Project for Public Spaces
What Makes a Great Public Destination?
Is it Possible to Build One Where You Live?

In a recent blog post, entrepreneur-turned-VC Mark Suster wrote about the necessary ingredients for a city trying to develop a successful start-up community. His advice seemed applicable to any community that’s trying to create a strong local sense of place, so we’ve retrofitted his recommendations to speak broadly to people who are working to transform their public spaces into magnetic destinations that are reflective of the diverse communities that surround them.

Monday, November 12, 2012

From the NFB — Radiant City

In this feature length film Gary Burns, Canada's king of surreal comedy, joins journalist Jim Brown on an outing to the suburbs. Venturing into territory both familiar and foreign, they turn the documentary genre inside out, crafting a vivid account of life in The Late Suburban Age.

Radiant City by Jim Brown & by Gary Burns, National Film Board of Canada

From Straight.com
Kitsilano Retail Clusters
Hold Competitive Advantage Over Malls

Concentration of companies boosts performance
More than two decades ago, Harvard Business School professor Michael Porter pioneered the concept of clusters, which are geographic concentrations of companies and their suppliers and service providers in certain industries. A classic example was the proliferation of advertising agencies along Madison Avenue in New York.
According to Harvard’s Institute for Strategy and Competitiveness, clusters enhance productivity, better enabling companies to compete.“For example, clusters may not simply reduce the cost of production but the cost of exchange, by enhancing trading relationships and the transparency of local input and output markets,” Porter, along with Temple University’s Mercedes Delgado and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Scott Stern, wrote in March 2011 paper. “The impact of local knowledge spillovers likely does not simply accrue to a single firm in an isolated way; rather, related local discoveries may simultaneously enhance the knowledge base of multiple local firms.”
Lease rates cheaper than malls
"... running a business on a busy street is usually more cost-efficient than leasing space in a shopping centre, where retail tenants are responsible for covering cost of space shared by everyone."
Sometimes, it can be 30 percent of the rent, whereas on the street, the common-area maintenance is very low,” [Retail consultant Richard] Wozny says. “You’re not looking after a big parking lot and internal mall corridors.” 
More in the Straight: Kitsilano rises as Vancouver retail hot spot | Vancouver, Canada | Straight.com

Friday, November 9, 2012

Thursday, November 8, 2012

From The Pop-Up City
Top 5 Of The Greatest Urban Rooftop Farms

Urban farming has become one of the major international urban trends — a good reason for us to make a Top 5 of the greatest rooftop farms we’ve come across over the last years. Read more: Attribution Non-CommercialTop 5 Of The Greatest Urban Rooftop Farms — The Pop-Up City

Monday, November 5, 2012

From PlaceMakers.com
Finally Thinkin’ Small, But Can We
Build on What We’ve Learned?

The original Katrina Cottage: Hurricane Katrina’s scrappy li’l legacy.
As soon as the destructive path of Hurricane Sandy became evident, I got emails and calls from colleagues who, like me, worked in disaster recovery situations on the Gulf Coast. 

When the clean-up gets underway, could this be an opportunity for the Eastern Seaboard states to apply some of the rebuilding lessons of the Gulf after Katrina? Is there a role for Katrina Cottages?

Read more: Finally Thinkin’ Small: But can we build on what we’ve learned? | PlaceMakers

Sunday, November 4, 2012

Nanaimo Transportation Master Plan

The City of Nanaimo recently began working on its first long-term Transportation Master Plan, the first plan of its kind for BC's third oldest city. Transportation touches every part of our daily lives, affecting how we move, how food, goods and services reach us, how we access employment, our household budgets, what housing choices we make, how our City looks and feels and how we interact with our fellow citizens... More at Nanaimo Transportation Master Plan | City of Nanaimo

Saturday, November 3, 2012

TEDxManitoba
Hazel Borys of PlaceMakers
Confessions of a Former Sprawl Addict


http://www.placemakers.com/

From WhatWasThere
Corner of Hastings and Cambie 1900

Thanks to http://pasttensevancouver.tumblr.com/
Source http://searcharchives.vancouver.ca/exterior-of-arcade-n-w-corner-of-hastings-and-cambie-streets;rad

Friday, November 2, 2012

Thanks to illustratedvancouver.ca/ Illustrated Vancouver, Drawings of an imagined Block51, unattributed, but... In this documentary short, Vancouver architect Stanley King demonstrates his method for involving the public in urban design. Called the "draw-in/design-in”, the method is applied to a downtown Vancouver area slated for redevelopment. How can it be made to best serve the needs of the people who will use it? Here, sketches prepared by students and refined by adults are used to guide city planners.

From The Calgary Herald — Mayor Nenshi
To Developers: "Don't Bring Us Crap"

JASON MARKUSOFF, CALGARY HERALD
If developers want the city to cut red tape, they should cut the “crap” from their projects, Mayor Naheed Nenshi said Tuesday.
In his annual Chamber of Commerce speech, the mayor lauded the city planning department’s efforts to ease some of the bureaucratic hurdles that home builders and commercial developers routinely complain about — but the city shouldn’t settle for low-quality developments.
“You cannot come as the industry to say to us, ‘It takes too long for me to get my approvals’ if you’re bringing us crap,” Nenshi told the luncheon crowd.
Read more: ‘Crap’ shouldn’t be easier to build, mayor tells chamber

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Repair the Square!

Every town has its ceremonial central public square. Nanaimo's is Dallas Square, one block from the waterfront promenade. It's home to the Cenotaph and shares the site with St. Paul's Anglican Church, built in 1931. The original Anglican Church on the site was built in the 1860s.

It has been neglected and harm was done to it some years ago with the creation of a single lane traffic ramp to align with Church Street. At the cost of effectively the loss of nearly half of the potential area of the public square, turning right from Front St. onto Church St. was made slightly more convenient for motorists.

Downtown Urban Design Plan and Guidelines recognizes Dallas Square's importance in "the development of an open space and pathway network throughout the downtown. Existing city owned lands and rights-of-way, combined with private property redevelopment, provide the opportunity for a coordinated park, pathway and open space plan..."

A modest improvement would be the immediate removal of the ramp and a design competition to generate ideas to renovate the square and better connect it to the walkway that leads to the waterfront promenade and parks. The Design Guidelines offered this starting point for fresh design ideas for the square.


More ambitiously, consideration should be given to the acquisition from the Anglican Church of its adjacent property, currently a parking lot. Church parking lots offer a win-win opportunity for steadily densifying downtowns: badly needed revenue for the churches and the creation of badly needed pedestrian scale public squares for the City.

St. Paul's would anchor a brilliant new central public square, modeled on the public squares of European cities.

The renovation of Dallas Square could also signal a badly needed tipping point for Nanaimo: a return to designing human scale public space.





From the Design Guidelines document:

DOWNTOWN PARKS

This downtown plan anticipates further research and design work towards the development of an open space and pathway network throughout the downtown. Existing city owned lands and rights-of-way, combined with private property redevelopment, provide the opportunity for a coordinated park, pathway and open space plan to be incrementally established over time.

With the redevelopment of numerous sites at or adjacent to the downtown waterfront, a number of park sites along the waters' edge walkway and adjacent to Front Street will require redesign. The increased number of residents, as well as a greater number of people attracted to the area in the future, will cause more intensive use and greater demand on walkways and other park amenities. This means that paving, lighting, seating and other features will have to be developed in concert with the building redevelopments neighbouring these parks, paths and public open spaces.

Georgia Park

Redesign and redevelopment should be considered for Georgia Park and Dallas Square. Georgia Park requires attention to good public visibility and safe access across Front Street.







More at: http://parksgo.ca/nanaimo/dallas-square-cenotaph/

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

From Kaid Benfield's Blog — What Makes
A Great City Street? Consider These Examples

From Kaid Benfield's Blog | Switchboard, from NRDC

My friend Victor Dover has taught me more about the importance of streets to community, and the characteristics that can make them great, than I ever might have imagined. I’m still learning, and it’s a fascinating journey. He’s about to share his knowledge with all of us, as he reports that he and his urban compadre John Massengale are writing a book on the subject to be published next year. I don’t know John as well as I know Victor, but he seems to know his stuff, too; this one promises to be a must-have when it comes out.

Read more: What makes a great city street? Consider these examples | Kaid Benfield's Blog | Switchboard, from NRDC

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

From OneStopCity
The Wisdom of Jane Jacobs

OneStopCity • The wisdom of Jane Jacobs

Sunday, October 28, 2012

From The Buzzer blog — More Trips in
Metro Vancouver by Bike and Transit

Guess what? In 2011, more people were taking trips around the region, but more and more are taking transit and cycling. Those are just some initial conclusions from our 2011 Trip Diary survey that we’re able to share today!

Read more at The Buzzer blog.

Friday, October 26, 2012

1962 Audio from WNYC.org
Jane Jacobs Defends Urbanism in
1960s New York City Planning

Jane Jacobs, in this 1962 appearance at a Books and Authors Luncheon, explains her current role as a community leader in the fight against what she views as the excesses and excrescences of the arrogant Modernist redesign of city neighborhoods. More including audio recording of the 1962 speech at: Jane Jacobs Defends Urbanism in 1960s New York City Planning - WNYC
Playing: Jane Jacobs Defends Urbanism in 1960s New York City Planning

What it Takes to Revive a City Park —
Lessons from Houston’s Market Square

Market Square in Houston is among one of the most successful urban park renewal projects. Over the years, the Square transitioned from the city center’s historic district to a parking lot to a green area to art space, never having a real sense of purpose or welcoming. Yet in 2010, through collaboration and partnerships, the park was transformed. City government, local development groups, residents and property owners all came together and formed consensus on a plan for the park, designed to preserve its historical and artistic roots.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Thoughts on Building Strong Towns

Charles Marohn is a Professional Engineer (PE) and a member of the American Institute of Certified Planners (AICP). He has a Bachelor's degree in Civil Engineering from the University of Minnesota's Institute of Technology and a Masters in Urban and Regional Planning from the University of Minnesota's Humphrey Institute. He is the author of Thoughts on Building Strong Towns (Volume 1).

He combines these essentially geeky credentials with an urbanist's sensibility. He's interested in the creation of healthy neighbourhoods, in building community. He questions and challenges his engineering colleagues, analyzing costs/benefits of road infrastructure projects particularly in the medium and long term. The existing development model that dates from the years after WWII, "creates modest short-term benefits and massive long-term costs," he says.


Today's  municipalities' drive to create new growth to keep up with the costs of earlier infrastructure amounts to a "Ponzi scheme". And. as we all know, Ponzi schemes come to unpleasant and abrupt ends. He claims no magic bullet solution but offers clear eyed perspective and outlines the mostly self-evident measures that need to be taken without delay. We knew prior to building this unsustainable car oriented model how to build strong  neighbourhoods, communities, towns. We need to take a look back to learn how to repair some of the damage done.

I've recommended to our Mayor and Council here in Nanaimo (a laboratory in which to study the damage done to neighbourhoods by sprawl, malls and busy arterial roads) to read Marohn's Thoughts on Building Strong Towns and ask their senior managers, planners and engineers to brief them on whether in their opinion he's got it wrong and if so, how. And what if he's right?

Sunday, October 21, 2012

"Madrid Río" — How Madrid Reclaimed
The Banks of the Manzanares River

The city of Madrid dug 43 kilometres of tunnels into which the exit routes and motorways of the six-kilometre section along the River Manzanares disappeared...

More at: http://www.west8.com/projects/all/madrid_rio/

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Friday, October 19, 2012

MoMA Symposium —
The Child in the City of Play

The Child in the City of Play, Session 1
The Child in the City of Play, Session 2
Symposium details at: MoMA | The Child in the City of Play
MoMA exhibition: MoMA | Century of the Child: Growing by Design, 1900–2000

Thursday, October 18, 2012