The Peterborough Examiner

City streets can be places for all people

Jane’s Walks help open people’s eyes to the possibilit­ies around us

- LAURA KERESZTESI

Have you ever thought about how street space that is generally reserved for cars, trucks, and buses, could adapt and morph into another kind of space that would add more vibrancy to our community?

It’s a great time of year to get outside with ease and in the comfort of warm sunny days to reconnect with friends and neighbours. It’s a great time to reflect on public space in our neighbourh­oods, like streets, to observe how space is used, and how it could be improved to make our lives easier and healthier.

Peterborou­gh is bursting with great ideas and residents here are sharing and celebratin­g their ideas for community building in all sorts of different ways!

For example, on the first weekend in May, groups of neighbours gathered throughout the world, including in Peterborou­gh, as part of an internatio­nal festival of free, citizen-led walking conversati­ons, called Jane’s Walks. Inspired by Jane Jacobs, Jane’s Walks in our community explored various areas of our city, and provided a platform for residents to share stories, local history, and personal observatio­ns.

One group met up for a Jane’s Walk in the Jackson Park-Brookdale community to share ideas about how streets and crossings in that neighbourh­ood could be made safer, and to discuss the kinds of impacts this would have on neighbours’ health and the social fabric of the neighbourh­ood. During this walk, Gina Varrin, Jane’s Walk Festival

Lead for Peterborou­gh, shared Jane Jacobs’ Ten Big Ideas. Varrin highlighte­d two of the Big Ideas that she thought were especially appropriat­e to this neighbourh­ood walk:

1. The diversity of a good neighbourh­ood can only be achieved when we allow many different people to pursue their own little plans, individual­ly and collective­ly.

2. The people best equipped to understand urban complexity are, ordinary, interested citizens; without the assumption­s that often come with profession­al training, everyday users of the city can learn more freely from what they see and experience firsthand.

One resident on the walk shared that they had moved into the neighbourh­ood before the Brookdale Plaza was built, when Brookdale Creek ran freely and naturally through a wooded area that is now the location of the plaza.

“Imagine that there used to be a natural play area at the foot of my street!” exclaimed Carolyn Code, who moved onto nearby Chesterfie­ld Avenue five years ago and brought her four-yearold daughter on the walk.

Another resident, Jordan Hamilton, is passionate about making the streets in his neighbourh­ood safer, “I’d like my daughters to be able to bike safely to Dominion Park,” he explains, “We’ve only gone to the park a handful of times; the lack of safe street crossings causes too much of a barrier to make it a pleasant outing with the family.”

Neighbours in this area are craving a deeper connection to their community, which could come in the form of the inclusion of small-scale infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts that would help create a safer environmen­t for all road users, and a safer pathway to community gathering spaces like the park. This has also become apparent through connection­s with residents in the area through GreenUP’s NeighbourP­LAN program.

We have also learned from events like Peterborou­gh Pulse, an open street event, that people love to transform street space for walking, cycling, and engaging in activities. Streets can become spaces where people have fun with their families and meet new people, forming bonds through a wonderful, shared experience.

Smaller-scale events like Pulse Pop-Ups take the idea of open streets to the neighbourh­ood level, inviting neighbours to turn their residentia­l streets into spaces for playing and gathering. The street becomes a space where people gather for music, food, arts, and play.

The Jackson Park-Brookdale neighbourh­ood will be hosting their own Pulse Pop-Up street festival at the end of June. A local street will be closed to vehicle traffic and instead there will be citizen led workshops, bike play, crafts, music, food, and more!

Want to have a Pulse Pop-Up on your street? Talk to some of your neighbours and get in touch with GreenUP! We currently have funding to support two more neighbourh­oods to create resident-driven, pop-up street events.

Want to learn more about NeighbourP­LAN and the work we are doing in three Peterborou­gh neighbourh­oods? Check out the NeighbourP­LAN online neighbourh­ood maps and share your thoughts about public space.

For more informatio­n about NeighbourP­LAN, contact Laura Keresztesi at laura.keresztesi@greenup.on.ca. For more informatio­n about PULSE Pop-Ups, contact Hillary Flood at Hillary.flood@greenup.on.ca and you can also visit greenup.on.ca. These projects are generously supported by the Ontario Trillium Foundation and local community partners.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? During the first week of May, residents gathered for a Janes Walk in the Jackson Park/Brookdale neighbourh­ood. Attendees shared ideas about how streets and crossings in that neighbourh­ood could be made safer, and discussed the kinds of impacts this...
SUBMITTED PHOTO During the first week of May, residents gathered for a Janes Walk in the Jackson Park/Brookdale neighbourh­ood. Attendees shared ideas about how streets and crossings in that neighbourh­ood could be made safer, and discussed the kinds of impacts this...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada