Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space

"A community’s physical form, rather than its land uses, is its most intrinsic and enduring characteristic." [Katz, EPA] This blog focuses on place and placemaking and all that makes it work--historic preservation, urban design, transportation, asset-based community development, arts & cultural development, commercial district revitalization, tourism & destination development, and quality of life advocacy--along with doses of civic engagement and good governance watchdogging.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Chinatown double happiness bicycle rack, Victoria, BC


chinatown double happiness
Originally uploaded by Luton
Washcycle, the region's unparalleled blog about bicycling issues, blogged this photo about a place-appropriate bicycle rack installed in Chinatown in Victoria, BC. The rack has Chinese language characters saying "double happiness" and is the new standard design for that section of the city.

I feel strongly that rather than standardize street furniture and other place accoutrements across a city, that there needs to be room for different treatments calling attention to different places, to help strengthen the unique characteristics of place.

Bicycle rack in the Pearl District, Portland, paying homage to Portland's bridges crossing the Willamette River.
Creative bike rack in the Pearl District

Art deco styled trash can in the vicinity of Rockefeller Plaza, New York City.
Art deco stylized trash can (waste receptacle), 34th Street Partnership, NYC

Why not have bus shelters more appropriate for historic districts located in historic districts, different kinds of pole standards for streetlights, not just "historic old" streetlight styles but what about Art Deco, etc., different kinds of benches and trash cans, and street signs.

This bus shelter is in Berlin, but has a design comparable to the old carriage and trolley waiting stations on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol abutting 1st Street SE.
Helios bus shelter in Berlin

E.g., I am big on street signs that identify neighborhoods and/or historic districts, to help strengthen the spatial qualities of place.

This is an example of an ordinary street sign in Pittsburgh at an intersection, but generally these signs identify the neighborhood, in this case Highland Park.

This is one in Alexandria, showing a neighborhood historic district.
Wythe Street sign, Parker Gray Historic District, Alexandria

And this one, in Brooklyn, does the same, but a little more distinctively.
Montague Street "street sign" showing its location in the historic district

This is from Petersburg, Virginia, which also color codes the signs according to the historic district. For example, the Courthouse district has powder blue signs and the Poplar Lawn district has green signs.
Color coded street signs, Old Towne Historic District, Petersburg

Prescott, Arizona
Historic district street sign, Prescott, Arizona

Chinatown, Vancouver. Flickr photo by Madame Lemon
Chinatown, Vancouver, BC

I hate the DC historic district sign. It's unmemorable. And the sign isn't placed on every block as a matter of course (but considering the design, that's a good thing).
Historic District Sign

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