I like the cut of your jib

topic posted Fri, September 14, 2007 - 1:21 PM by  Droogy
So here's my first contribution - Park(ing) Day - here's the link:

www.parkingday.org/ to support a local one, or find out how to set up your own.

On Sept 21 in cities all over America, people will turn parking spaces into public parks.

Yea.
posted by:
Droogy
Los Angeles
  • Re: I like the cut of your jib

    Fri, September 14, 2007 - 1:31 PM
    September 21, 2007 - PARK(ing) Day
    PARK(ing) Day is a one-day, global event centered in San Francisco where artists, activists, and citizens collaborate to temporarily transform parking spots into “PARK(ing)” spaces: temporary public parks.

    The Latest News:

    San Francisco-widE:
    PARK(ing) Day is next week!

    Check out the updated How To Manual for the latest tips!

    The Bay Area PARK(ing) Day Map, is launched! See it here:



    To get your PARK listed on the Bay Area map, send us the location, name/description, times of operation, credits and website/link to: info at parkingday dot org.

    TO BE LISTED ON THE PRINTED MAP distributed on PARK(ing) Day, we must receive your PARK info by Monday, Sept. 17th at 5:00 PM. All PARKS listed on the Bay Area interactive map will automatically be included on the printed version.

    And if you live in the SF Bay Area, consider joining our PARK(ing) Day Google Group.


    Nationwide: The Trust for Public Land is spearheading National PARK(ing) Day in more than a dozen major cities across the U.S., including NYC, LA, DC, Seattle, Portland, Chicago, St. Paul, Boston, Austin, Salt Lake City, Tampa, Miami and others. Learn more and get involved here!


    WORLDWIDE: PARKs are planned for London, Berlin, Barcelona, Valencia, Munich, Rio de Janeiro, Toronto, Melbourne, Vilnius (Lithuania) and other cities!

    The mission:

    To rethink the way streets are used, call attention to the need for urban parks, and improve the quality of urban human habitat....at least until the meter runs out!

    On November 16th, 2005, REBAR opened eyes worldwide by transforming a metered parking spot into a park. Locating a site that was underserved by public outdoor space, we installed a small, temporary park that provided nature, seating, and shade. By our calculations, we provided 24,000 square-foot-minutes of public open space that afternoon. See the original PARK(ing) video!

    Since the initial PARK(ing) project was created we've been contacted by people worldwide. What began as a simple, playful idea has become a lively and visible symbol of the desire to reprogram the street and increase public open space in cities all over the planet.

    In 2006, with support from The Trust for Public Land, we built upon this groundswell of interest and created an international event. PARK(ing) Day 2006 brought artists, designers, and activists together to create 47 PARKs in 13 Cities worldwide, including New York, London, and Rio de Janeiro.

    For more, see our PARK(ing) Day 2006 page and the video!

    In 2007, we will show how our temporary PARKs can become permanent new urban places and connect people with ways to transform their entire city's streetscape for a sustainable future.

    Join artists, designers, and activists around the world who are peacefully demonstrating how to reduce congestion, clean the air, save energy, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and improve urban neighborhoods. Get Involved!


    Project Organizers

    REBAR
    [www.rebargroup.org]
    REBAR is a San Francisco-based art collective. Much like a DJ samples recorded sounds, REBAR appropriates elements of the physical/cultural world and remixes them into novel contexts. By “remixing the landscape” in this way, the group exposes new meanings and alters assumptions about our shared environment. REBAR projects engage social, ecological, and cultural processes as they unfold materially in space and time. While the group’s work can be used or interpreted as playful, ridiculous, or absurd, it is also highly functional. REBAR remixes the ordinary, repurposes the ubiquitous, and rebuilds with invisible structural material . . . much like rebar itself.




    PUBLIC ARCHITECTURE
    [www.publicarchitecture.org]
    Established in 2002 and based in South of Market, San Francisco, Public Architecture is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that acts as a catalyst for public discourse through advocacy, education, and the design of public spaces and amenities. Rather than waiting for commissions that represent well-understood needs and desires, we take a leadership role, identifying significant problems of wide relevance that require innovative research and design. We seek needs and desires that are palpable but poorly defined, in circumstances where both client and financing must be imagined in new ways.



    THE TRUST FOR PUBLIC LAND - National PARK(ing) Day Organizer
    [www.tpl.org]
    The Trust for Public Land (TPL) is a national, nonprofit, land conservation organization that conserves land for people to enjoy as parks, community gardens, historic sites, rural lands, and other natural places, ensuring livable communities for generations to come. A long-term goal of TPL is to ensure that someday everyone in our cities has a park, playground, or inviting public space nearby.





    Sponsors

    Black Rock Arts Foundation
    [www.blackrockarts.org]
    The Black Rock Arts Foundation supports and promotes community-based interactive art - art that generates social participation. The process whereby this art is created, the means by which it is displayed and the character of the work itself should inspire immediate actions that connect people to one another in a larger communal context.



    David Baker + Partners Architects
    [www.dbarchitect.com]
    Formed in 1982, DB+P's work combines social concern with a signature design character, resulting in distinctive, high-quality buildings that provide residents with a strong sense of community. In this way, their work acts as an advocate for improved urban planning, where looking good only counts if it does good, too.






    Project Allies

    Friends of the Urban Forest
    [www.fuf.net]
    Friends of the Urban Forest is a non-profit organization committed to the belief that trees are a critical element of a livable urban environment. Since 1981, they have offered financial, technical, and practical assistance to individuals and neighborhood groups who want to plant and care for trees.



    Community Walk
    [www.communitywalk.com]
    Excellent interactive personal and community maps.







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