Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Four | Planning Programming, for Seasonality and Activation
Gaps in park master planning frameworks
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part One | Levels of Service"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Two | Utilizing Academic Research as Guidance"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Three | Planning for Climate Change/Environment"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Four | Planning for Seasonality and Activation"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Five | Planning for Public Art as an element of park facilities"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning, Part Six | Art(s) in the Park(s) as a comprehensive program "
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Seven | Park Architectural (and Landscape Design) History"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Eight | Civic Engagement"
-- "Gaps in Parks Master Planning: Part Nine | Second stage planning for parks using the cultural landscape framework"
Some park systems do seasonality and activation within their plans and programs.
For example the Salt Lake City park master plan, ReImagine Nature, does discuss programming and activation.
Still, a majority of parks master plans don't address these items in a systematic enough way.
And definitely not in terms of actively providing programming.
Types of park spaces. Image: Integrated Public Realm, Glatting Jackson.
Flexible spaces allow for flexible uses. This Boston Globe article, "‘Sticky’ places are urban planning lifelines Shared spaces build community and are key to alleviating America’s loneliness epidemic. Here’s how to create them.," discusses the design of spaces like parks in ways that foster interaction and connection. This concept extends to the organization and delivery of programming.
-- "What makes a successful place?," Project for Public Spaces
-- "High-Performance Public Spaces: A Tool For Building Great Communities," David Barth
The Project for Public Spaces book How to Turn a Place Around is good for thinking about these issues. And Learning from Bryant Park: Revitalizing Cities, Towns and Public Spaces too.
PPS Place diagram, extended version.
Programming. Programming can be as simple as facilitating groups, organizing play at playgrounds, reading time at playgrounds, making sports equipment available so people can play without having to have equipment, organizing biking training, facilitating "drop in" play time without permits, etc.
-- Activating Parks for Stronger, Healthier Cities, City Parks Alliance
-- "Programming parks. How do organized events and activities affect the inclusivity of urban green spaces?," Journal of Leisure Research (2023)
-- "The layering effect: how the building blocks of an integrated public realm set the stage for community building and Silver Spring, Maryland as an example" (2012)
Plan for all age segments and demographics. When planning for programming it's important to be systematic and address all ages and demographic types (e.g., households with dogs, families, etc.). Design Workshop, in discussing their Branch Park project in Austin, Texas, expresses this very clearly:
Accommodating All Generations: When people think of parks, they think of children as the main users, but in reality, people of all age ranges benefit from using outdoor spaces. Today’s parks need to be multi-generational and multi-functional, requiring designs and plans that create spaces that accommodate all ages. We must balance the diverse needs of empty nesters seeking outdoor space in which to relax, young adults seeking a space for an evening kickball game, teenagers who want to hang out with friends, and young kids who want to play. At Branch Park, the design team took these various experiences into account, incorporating seating options, shaded areas, viewing gardens, open spaces conducive to informal games, and a playground. The park allows all community members to enjoy the space simultaneously.
Seasonality. My writings on daypart planning ("Planning programming by daypart, month, season: and Boston Winter Garden, DC's Holiday Market, etc.," 2016) are relevant to parks planning.
Sugar House Park, Salt Lake City.
Plan for time of day and day of the week sure. But plan for four seasons of activity, depending on the park and its location. Make accommodations as needed, from lighting when it's dark to snow clearance in winter--provided your park is used in winter.
In a study for the Bridge Park project in Washington, DC, one team came up with a nice hierarchy for programming for seasonality:
-- Season
-- Month (July 4th, Christmas, New Year's, etc.)
-- National Events (Public Lands Day, Earth Day, etc.) -- not included but should be]
-- DC/city events (e.g., Cherry Blossom Festival in April)
-- Events or programming related to the geographic interest area (neighborhood street festival, etc.)
and then what it calls
-- Private Events
-- Special Events
-- Extended Events (like a farmers market)
-- Festivals.
But this is more about programming around major events, not simple things like reading group at a playground.
Reading to children at Riverside Park, New York City, 1962. Photo: Neal Boenzi, New York Times
More parks systems are developing outdoor winter programming guidance (Denver Outdoor Adventure and Alternative Sports Strategic Plan), when before use of parks in winter wasn't considered a priority.
WRT winter and children:
-- "New Survey: Majority of U.S. Adults are Less Active During the Winter," National Recreation and Park Association public art as a park element and presentation
-- "Seasonal Variation in Children’s Physical Activity and Sedentary Time," Medicine & Science in Exercise & Sport, 2016
The researchers found that physical activity was lower in autumn and winter compared to spring; average activity levels across the group peaked in April at 65.3 min/day and reached their lowest levels in February at 47.8 min/day. Physical activity was at its lowest at weekends during winter. Children were at their most active during early summer, particularly at weekends.
Summer is very hot...
Activation. There has always been tension in park management over active versus passive use. Active use tends to focus on heavy duty physical activity, especially team sports. A lot of time, except at recreation centers, parks aren't actively programmed.
By default, park users are the programmers, but how they program is determined by the facilities made available to them. But active use doesn't have to mean team sports, it can just be stuff to do, from the presentation of a movie to a group walk or yoga. And I think it's important to facilitate this kind of variety when typically parks and recreation departments have focused on sport/athletic uses.
From Salt Lake City's ReImagine Nature park vision plan.
Salt Lake City's park plan outlines programming opportunities by the month, in terms of different activities in two categories, culture and entertainment, and community and recreation.
The "wheel" diagram, organized by month, then indicates the months that the various activities, such as yoga, movie nights, pop up events, sledding, outdoor education and dining, are likely to be conducted.
Canada's Park People published a set of short manuals on how to organize various kinds of activities within a park:
-- How to host a picnic in the park
-- How to host a campfire in the park
-- How to host a movie in the park
-- How-to connect with nature in the park
-- Adopt a park tree manual
Montgomery County Maryland has an initiative to do more activation, especially of smaller spaces in more urban areas, as are more parks systems elsewhere.
-- Energized Public Places Functional Master Plan
Types of park spaces.
Laird Park's Movie Night is sponsored by local realty company Niche Homes.Neighborhood Parks. Laird Park, a neighborhood park in one of Salt Lake's most historic neighborhoods, has a lot of activity going on, although it's more sponsored by local businesses and community groups, but without the creation of a formal Friends group. It's a great example of ground up park activation.
They have movie nights with food trucks, kids toys left out in the playground for communal use, music events, a huge Easter Egg Hunt, and a Fourth of July parade.
Neighborhood streets. Not a park function per se, but parklets, "streeteries"--parklets used by restaurants, dining in the street, public space treatments and initiatives may involve parks departments as partners.
Parklet
Regional Parks. In park categorization systems, large multi-faceted parks tend to be called regional parks, and can have an array of activities. There are many examples. In Salt Lake, Liberty Park is like New York City's Central Park, and Pioneer Park serves downtown, and is a hub of activity such as during the Saturday Farmers Market.
Toronto and some other communities also have a tradition of community brick ovens in parks, run by volunteers which supports bread baking, community potlucks, etc.-- How To Start A Community Wood-Fired Oven Project
-- "Wolfville community oven serves up meals with side of neighbourly connection," CBC TV
-- Cooking with fire in the public space (pdf)
-- "A Wood-fired Communal Oven In A Park: Why Bother?," PPS (excerpt from Cooking with fire)
Berczy Park Fountain, Toronto.
Plazas, squares, central park spaces, streets and parking lots in neighborhoods and districts, like in Berczy Park in Toronto or Sundance Square Plaza in Fort Worth ("Sundance Square turns 5," Fort Worth Business Press) are other examples of signature parks at a smaller scale.
Parking lots and streets can become vibrant spaces when repurposed temporarily for farmers markets and other activities.
Like the Waverly/32nd Street Market in Baltimore ("The Magic of the Waverly Farmers Market," JHU News-Letter, "Finding my way at the Waverly farmers market," Baltimore Sun).
Waverly Market
Sometimes plazas are poorly placed, like Freedom Plaza in Washington, DC, so they go unused most of the time. DC's Franklin Square is more centrally located, but wasn't designed for such a function. Although more recently the National Park Service and the city changed the park so it can serve a more "gathering" function ("D.C. Mayor Bowser cuts ribbon on newly renovated Franklin Square," Washington Post).
Signature Parks/Central Gathering Spaces. More cities are developing what we might call "signature parks" usually in their downtowns, but not limited to downtowns. In downtowns, these spaces tend to have leadership from business improvement districts and real estate interests.
-- The Case for Open Space: Why the Real Estate Industry Should Invest in Parks and Open Spaces, ULI
In parks typologies these might be called Regional Parks or Central Gathering Space (squares, plazas). Depending on their size, activities and programming I would re-term them and call them Signature Parks.
Examples include Campus Martius in Detroit ("The Beach at Campus Martius," Project for Public Spaces), Levy Park in Houston (Levy Park, OJB Architecture), also Discovery Green Park in Houston ("History"), Guthrie Green in Tulsa ("Land for you and me: Guthrie Green at 10," Tulsa People Magazine), the expanded Grand Park in Los Angeles ("Take a Tour Around the Civic Center's Huge New Grand Park," Curbed LA), of course Bryant Park ("Inside the transformation of Bryant Park," New York Daily News, "A Place Is Better Than a Plan: Revitalizing urban areas is best done through small improvements, not grand designs," City Journal) in Manhattan, and many more.
The Bentway in Toronto ("The Bentway makes magic in a hostile urban space," Toronto Star) and the Underline in Miami are parks created under freeways, and the Bentway especially is actively programmed, especially with its winter ice ribbon.
Campus Martius beach.These parks are designed to be actively and heavily programmed throughout the day and throughout the year.
They are often strongly branded and marketed.
Operationally, usually they are run by nonprofits separate from a city parks department, may be organized as parks conservancies ("Creating a Park Conservancy that Fits," NRPA) have financial support philanthropically or from the equivalent of a special service/tax district. In business districts, often parks are managed by business improvement districts ("A business improvement district for a park? Hey, it just might work," amNY).
The way that the South Park Library in Seattle incorporates outdoor space into the library program, as Pavement Park, which was the street in front of the library, is creative.
Trails. Some trails projects like Waterloo Greenway in Austin ("Waterloo Greenway gets $9M federal grant for second phase of parks system," Austin Monitor) and the Great Rivers Greenways in St. Louis ("Great Rivers Greenway Added More Greenways in 2023 Than Ever," Riverfront Times) are designed similarly, to be active and even if linear focused on connecting and enhancing cultural and other civic assets along the route.
Other examples include the Cynwyd Heritage Trail in Lower Merion Township outside of Philadelphia (this was one of the first plans I read that actively intended to connect various neighborhood, community, and commercial district assets together), the East Side Greenways in Belfast, and the National Capital trails in Ottawa.
Iowa, building on the 50+ year old Register Annual Great Bike Ride Around Iowa event each summer has expanded its trail network greatly, with signature trails including the High Trestle Trail and the Raccoon Valley Trail. Recreational cycling has become a significant contributor to local economies ("Iowa's bike trails, tourism ambitions, grow along with RAGBRAI," Des Moines Register).
Open Streets. Another popular activity is what is called Open Streets, where streets are closed for the day (sometimes in a park like Rock Creek in DC/Maryland, for the weekend) in favor of sustainable mobility and other activities. This doesn't necessarily happen in a park but could.
-- Open Streets Design Guide
-- Open Streets Project
-- "Summer Streets NYC 2023: everything you need to know," TimeOut New York
-- "Summer Streets Begins This Weekend, Kicking off for the First Time in All Five Boroughs," press release
-- CicLavia, Los Angeles
Retail space and office building activation. Shopping centers and other retail districts often use the same activation strategies as parks, libraries, and business districts as a way to attract patrons and keep them in their spaces longer ("Lifestyle centers: the mall is about the city," Interni, "Lifestyle centers: reinvented communities or dressed-up shopping malls?," The Conaversation, "What is a Retail Activation?," Bridgewater Studio, "Malls have transformed themselves into mixed-use lifestyle centers," Modern Retail).
Scheduling/creating, promoting, and distributing calendars. I think it's important to create a set of anchor events for a park, and a schedule for the year, so that these events can be promoted in an ongoing, regularized fashion. It should be done both digitally and analog, aiming to maximize communication ("Park City crafts special-event calendar loaded with festivals, sports," Park Record).
Labels: daypart planning, parks and recreation planning, plazas, public space management, squares, urban design/placemaking
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As the days are getting longer you may find yourself still looking for an activity even after the sun goes down. Tucked within the Muskegon State Park is a trail system that keeps the lights on for night owls.
Muskegon Luge Adventure Sports Park, located at 462 N Scenic Dr. in Muskegon, keeps its cross-country ski and snowshoe trail open, groomed and lit every night for hikers.
Hike the Lights turns on its lights at sunset and off at 10 p.m.
Throughout the trail, hikers will come across clearly marked trail heads and maps giving time and distance estimates to keep you on pace, and make sure you don’t get lost in the woods. Signs also indicate slope inclines and wheelchair accessibility points.
The packed gravel makes the trail accessible for wheelchairs and strollers. Dogs are also welcome as long as they are on a secured 6-foot leash.
In addition to spot lights the trail also has colorful blue and purple lights illuminating the branches above to give the trail a magical feel. You can become a Bright Lights Supporter and sponsor a light pole for a year for $100.
William H. Whyte on the characteristics that make plazas successful or unsuccessful.
https://www.nytimes.com/1972/12/03/archives/please-just-a-nice-place-to-sit.html
Please, just a nice place to sit
https://www.ocregister.com/2024/04/02/oc-parks-announces-lineup-for-its-free-2024-summer-concert-series
OC Parks announces lineup for its free 2024 Summer Concert Series
The shows will take place on Thursday evenings throughout the county from June 20-Aug. 22.
7 different parks
OC Parks’ free Sunset Cinema announces 2024 summer series lineup
https://www.ocregister.com/2024/04/02/oc-parks-free-sunset-cinema-announces-2024-summer-series-lineup/
4/10/24
Disneyland has already hosted two After Dark events in 2024 — the returning Sweethearts’ Nite and the new Disney Channel Nite. The always popular Star Wars Nite events return on select nights between April 16 and May 9 at Disneyland.
All of the Disneyland After Dark events feature specialty themed entertainment, character meet-and-greets, photo op backdrops, food and drinks, collectible merchandise, commemorative keepsakes and unlimited PhotoPass digital downloads along with select rides and shows.
Pre-party mix-in starts at 6 p.m. each night with the private event running from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. each evening. No theme park reservations are required to attend the separate-admission events. Parking is not included.
I can't believe I didn't mention street furniture as a category of its own. Mostly it's discussed in the context of other features.
https://www.thestar.com/opinion/contributors/no-wonder-torontonians-rarely-stop-to-enjoy-the-city-we-make-it-as-hard-as/article_e71c7492-4ded-11ef-b2fa-af86c3f9f465.html
No wonder Torontonians rarely stop to enjoy the city: We make it as hard as possible to sit down
Movable furniture creates opportunities for people to furnish a public space so more people can actually stay in and enjoy public space. The technique has transformed parks and squares from Paris to Brisbane to Nashville.
Unstructured spaces. Some nice citations.
https://www.theatlantic.com/family/archive/2024/07/play-streets-children-adults/679258/
What Adults Lost When Kids Stopped Playing in the Street
In many ways, a world built for cars has made life so much harder for grown-ups.
In the U.K., Rose, Ferguson, and their friend Ingrid Skeels expanded their experiment in 2011 by founding Playing Out, an organization that has helped residents on more than 1,000 streets in dozens of cities across the country set up their own play sessions. These typically last for two hours and occur weekly, biweekly, or monthly. And yes, as with any other sort of play these days, the process takes work: Residents who’d like to set up a play street must get buy-in from neighbors, agree on dates, book road closures well in advance, and recruit stewards to stand guard at either end of the block. Organizers are also working against the headwinds of a society unaccustomed to children playing in the street. Even when blocks are officially closed to traffic, stewards often have to address drivers frustrated that they can’t get through. Some residents ask why the kids can’t just go to the park, and they worry about the noise or what will happen to their cars. When Jo Chesterman, a Bristol-based mother of two, first broached the idea of a play session on her street several years ago, some neighbors, she told me, seemed to worry “it was maybe going to be like Lord of the Flies.”
https://playingout.net/
Activation and eyes on the street in parks in bad areas.
https://www.inquirer.com/crime/harrowgate-park-kensington-safety-old-lady-gang-20240731.html
How an ‘Old Lady Gang’ restored order and cleared drug users from Harrowgate Park
For the last five years, three women have worked to protect the serenity of Harrowgate Park, keeping it clear of drug use that plagues many public spaces in Kensington.
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