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.

Monday, June 08, 2020

European Day of Parks: May 24th

I just learned about the European Day of Parks, sponsored by the EUROPARC Federation. It's a day for the celebration of parks and open spaces across Europe.

National Parks Week is held the last full week in April.

One reservation I have, is that while great, it focuses only on national parks.

There is National Public Lands Day, which is held on the fourth Saturday in September, focuses theoretically on all public lands, but more on federal public lands--not just NPS parks, but also lands of the Bureau of Land Management, the US Forest Service of the US Department of Agriculture, recreation facilities associated with dams and other waterworks managed by the Army Corps of Engineers, and the US Fish and Wildlife Service.

(Interestingly, the parks department in Salt Lake City is titled the Department of Parks and Public Lands.)

Because lots of places still may have bad weather the last full week of April, to me it makes sense to move the event to May or June and to expand it to Parks Month and to carve out opportunities to include all parks and open spaces as part of the recognition, not just installations of the National Park Service.

Oops, apparently July is Park and Recreation Month.  I would venture it is not well publicized since I didn't know about it.  One week should be focused on state parks.  Another week on county and city parks.

It would also be a good time for parks departments and friends organizations to hold an annual conference and training on parks issues, like the annual Parks and Greenspace Conference that Park Pride, the parks friends organization in Atlanta, does every year.

Even though I revile the methodology, that would be a good month to release the TPL Park Score ("Washington DC has lots of parks and open space, but it's not the #1 City park system in the US").

In any case, it's a good example of needing to promote a national annual calendar of events in the "parks space" to bring better attention to parks and open spaces, e.g.

Event Date
Free National Park entrance January, MLK Jr. Holiday
Earth Month April
Earth Day April 22nd
National Parks Week last full week of April
Free National Park entrance first day of National Parks Week
National Bike Month May
National Historic Preservation Month May
National Trails Day first Saturday in June
free fishing without a license events* summer
Park and Recreation MonthJuly
Free National Park entrance NPS anniversay, August 25th
National Public Lands Day last Saturday in September
Free National Park entrance National Public Lands Day
Free National Park entrance November, Veterans Day
Etc.

This year, Utah had a free fishing day, where people could fish without a license, but still had to follow other rules ("Free Fishing Day: 15 places in Utah to go fishing," Salt Lake Deseret News).

Labels: , ,

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home