CoolTown Studios

Thursday, April 10, 2008

NYC ‘Taking Back the Streets’

NYC ‘Taking Back the Streets’

Anyone familiar with New York City, especially Manhattan knows that there simply isn’t enough room for the pedestrians. The NY Times takes a look at ten progressive pedestrian-oriented solutions that the city’s urban leaders are suggesting:

The Woonerf - Popular in the Netherlands (translates to ‘living street’), it’s a primarily residential street that does not distinguish between a sidewalk and road, designed to look and feel like an outdoor living room.

Play Streets - Not only are streets temporarily closed to allow kids to play in them, but there’s talk of closing some of them permanently for this purpose.

Bike Boulevards - More bike lanes to up the less than 1% of New Yorkers who commute by bike (mainly because there are too many cars).

Pavement Hierarchy - Rather than allowing every single street access to cars, have some of them reserved strictly for parks and plazas.

Green Grid - Establish a pedestrian-only zone like Temple Bar, Dublin, or a pedestrian-only boulevard like La Rambla in Barcelona, Spain.

Mental Speed Bumps - Provide social activities alongside streets (ie BBQs, micro-parks, etc.) that subconsciously slow down drivers. In other words, making something good out of rubber necking.

Swaled Streets - Landscape street edges which collect stormwater, reducing runoff by 99%.

Lanescapes - A great example of taking it up a notch, ‘lanescapes’ are the application of ongoing events and scenes to a ‘green grid’.

Gentle Congestion - Urban micro-cars that flock like sheep using sophisticated sensors and navigation systems, even bumping one another slightly, thus the name, or even stackable cars.

Urban Acupuncture - Honestly, I don’t quite understand what the NY Times is specifically talking about here in terms of practical examples, but the idea is to inject the city with green pedestrian-oriented spaces throughout its ‘body’.

Image source: Chinatown by .mchung


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Pedestrian Only/Carfree | (0) Comments | (0) Trackbacks | Link |
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