Cooltown Studios
The official blog for crowdsourced placemaking

Friday, November 12, 2010

Pedestrian-only/car-free trends toward the crowd in Fall 2010

The demand for pedestrian-only places is increasingly being met. A few of the latest examples where the crowd and the powers that be are finding common ground…

The Plaza de Panama in Balboa Park, San Diego is returning to its pedestrian-only plaza roots, rather than keep it as a parking lot.

Residents in Jackson Heights, Queens, New York worked with the City to get a car-free street on Sundays in July and August in 2008, then successfully expanded it to become permanent in all of July and August. Check out the scene here.

A bit late to the party, the City of L.A. has gotten on board with the Ciclovia movement on 10/10/10, CicLAvia where 7.5 miles of streets were closed to cars, replaced by 10,000 pedestrians.

Meanwhile, the City of Hoboken, New Jersey is giving residents $500 to get rid of their cars and parking permits.

Park(ing) Day held its 5th annual international day-long event in September to transform streetside parking spaces into places for people (see image above). 2010 saw over 1000 such parklets in 140 cities, 21 countries, and 6 continents. Check out the photos here.

Not to be outdone, New York City’s Department of Transportation introduced a Pop-Up Cafes two-year pilot program in November, 2010, which essentially make those aforementioned park(ing) spaces permanent.

Also globally, over 1000 cities in 40 countries participated in the 11th annual World Carfree Day in September. The event could sure use a PR person, because there’s no overall summary of the event outside of individual city reports, like Washington DC with 7000 participants.

Based on news reports, this is just the beginning, as MSNBC reports, “Carmakers’ next problem: Generation Y; People in their teens and twenties are more interested in gadgets than cars”, with previous reports here and here. Gen Y quotes, “I just kind of came to the realization that I didn’t need it; “You have all this money, you know, and you decide you could put it all toward the car or you can put it toward other things like clothes, or your social life.”

Who you’ll hear more of is urban planner Jan Gehl, the inspiration behind many of the pedestrian-only programs in cities. Read more about his work in NY here. A few of his quotes, “Walking is life itself. Everything else will follow;” referring to tower-oriented architects as “birdshit architects” because they’re “planning from high above and dropping their things down;” and “A good city is like a good party. You stay for longer than you plan.”

What we’ll likely see more of is what Londoners are experiencing in their revitalized public spaces: urban gardens and music festivals; “pop-up” shops, restaurants, art studios and cinemas in empty urban spaces; and lots of outdoor ping-pong tables.


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

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Willoughby Street, Brooklyn, New York City, participant in the NYC Plaza Program

Pedestrian-oriented, car free update Fall 2010

What are the latest signs of a growing market for developing neighborhoods that focus on living rather than transporting?

- Gen Yers are giving cars a pass according to a Kiplinger article. Drivers aged 21 to 30 now account for 14% of miles driven, down from 21% in 1995, choosing mass transit, Zipcar and smartphones instead.

- The rise of mixed-use development means less car use, according to a report by the Journal of the American Planning Association, “The best way to minimize driving

read more…


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

Wednesday, September 08, 2010

A collage of car-free dining experiences

Top reasons why no car-free hoods in the U.S. 2010… yet

It’s a simple idea and the demand is certainly there, but why aren’t there any car-free neighborhoods in the U.S… yet?

First, overcoming either of these two reasons would have resulted in a car-free neighborhood:

1. No developer has the guts. Honestly, it really does only take one person with money to make it happen. It’s amazing, but no one in the last 80 years has stepped up. Until Joe Mellett of Bicycle City in Columbia, South Carolina. He’ll soon receive recognition for being one of the

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Pedestrian Only/Carfree | (14) Comments | Link |

Friday, July 09, 2010

Fan Mile, World Cup, Cape Town, South Africa

Cape Town’s spectacular World Cup fan walk

So, you’re South Africa and hosting the biggest event in the world, throwing the biggest party in the world via its Fan Fest... what kind of destination do you provide to embrace it all? That’s the Fan Walk, a 1.6 mile/2.6 km pedestrian promenade linking downtown Cape Town to its Green Point Stadium (pictured). In fact, it’s so successful, city leaders are looking to make it permanent.

You can’t ask for a more entertaining walk, or rather, experience. What’s more, it’ll be a cultural showcase

read more…


Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Entertainment & ArtsPedestrian Only/Carfree | (2) Comments | Link |

Monday, June 28, 2010

Pedestrian-only downtown Cairo, Egypt

Cairo to go pedestrian-only in downtown

One of the most dangerous cities for pedestrians will soon become one of the safest.

Egyptian Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif commissioned the country’s housing ministry in the fall of 2009 to choose an international firm via competition that to work with a local one in planning the transformation of a noisy, car-congested downtown (where residents refer to crossing streets as a sport, or for nostalgists, a video game) into a pedestrian-only district. See rendering of their proposal above. The

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

Monday, June 21, 2010

Ahmedabad, India

Design cities for people instead of cars by 2030

What will our cities look like in 2030 when we’ve run out of oil? The Our Cities Ourselves exhibition (June 24-Sept 11, 2010), a program of the Institute for Transportation and Development Policy provides an intriguing answer to that question by matching ten of the world’s top urban designers with ten of the world’s most dynamic cities. The general theme? From the exhibition…

“In the middle of the 20th century, cities across the U.S. were redesigned to accommodate the car. As people

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

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Car free Times Square becomes permanent

It’s official, as Mayor Bloomberg of New York City announced on February 11, 2010 that Times Square (and Herald Square) are permanently car free, almost a year after first announcing the plan. See the press release here.

Mayor Bloomberg, “In this day and age if you go around the world, all the other great cities have already tried to reduce the number of cars on their streets and convert some of the open spaces into space for other people.

“Three-fourths (76%) of New Yorkers surveyed think

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

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Snowpocalypse, Dupont Circle, Washington DC

Car free city for a day in Washington DC

What would a car free city be like? DC residents got a taste of that when the city experienced record snowfalls in early February of nearly five feet, the most since 1898. Just about the only thing shut down were the cars. Instead, the city was alive with people in the streets like no other day.

As you can see below, the local coffeehouse was packed, and the buzz of conversation was a few notches higher than usual. Now you may be wondering, what about other cities that have significant

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

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

Pedestrian promenade, Geneva, Switzerland

Geneva proposes 200 streets as pedestrian only

As creatives are increasingly preferring a world beyond cars in natural cultural districts that function more like Wikipedia than Encyclopedia Britannica, bureaucracies both corporate and government are largely stuck in management models of the industrial age that will slow the transition on their end.

Enter the government of Geneva, Switzerland and a tri-partisan 2-1 City Council vote to close 200 streets to cars. Or as Geneva’s council member Fabienne Fischer states, “It’s not really to

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

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Castro Commons plaza, San Francisco

Pedestrian movement accelerates in ‘09

The attitude among creatives is increasingly becoming aligned with the notion that Cars are the new smoking (the article lists ten reasons why). What’s more interesting is the growing evidence...

New York City’s Department of Transportation Commissioner is featured in Forbes magazine, Taking Back the Streets, on the city’s progressive investments in prioritizing people over cars, featured throughout this site’s Pedestrian Only/Car Free section.

Seasonal street closings have rapidly become

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Pedestrian Only/Carfree | (1) Comments | Link |

Thursday, May 21, 2009

17th Street Plaza, Castro, San Francisco

San Francisco’s new pedestrian plaza opens

Less than five months after announcing a plan to transform a San Francisco street into a pedestrian-only plaza, voila! The 7800 s.f. at 17th and Castro Streets, officially known as the 17th Street Plaza, opened on May 13, 2009 and as you can see has already been a success. There’s even a 17th Street Plaza Facebook group.

It’s the first of Mayor Gavin Newsom’s Pavement to Parks Initiative to create car-free pedestrian plazas, “There are many challenges to providing residents with open spaces

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Posted by Neil Takemoto in • Pedestrian Only/Carfree | (1) Comments | Link |
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