Showing posts with label Parks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parks. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Welcome, Columbus Commons.

Take a guess what this is...



The final phase of Columbus Commons, the plan that replaces the currently dead City Center! Downtown Columbus has all the news you need. The following image is of the first phase, scheduled to be finished in 2010 and cost between $15 -$20 million.

Monday, November 3, 2008

Crime in Minneapolis Is a Myth!

Well, not so much. Some vandal infiltrated the beautiful Gold Medal Park and stole some of the letters...how rude!

A neighbor at the Bridgewater recently noticed that someone removed the letter “P” from the large sign and flipped it upside down so the sign read “GOLD MEDAL dARK.” Then the letters “P” and “G” went missing, leaving the sign to read “OLD MEDAL ARK.” Yesterday an “A” disappeared as well.

Minneapolis Planning Commission President David Motzenbecker, a landscape architect who helped design the park at 2nd Street and 11th Avenue South, said the Park Development Foundation’s maintenance company is now repairing the missing letters and they should be back in place next week. The architects are researching a more vandal-proof attachment method for the hollow aluminum sign.

Motzenbecker said this type of vandalism has happened before. Soon after the park opened last year, someone removed a letter, apparently by rocking it back and forth until it broke off its stand, and left the letter on the ground.
If you haven't been, Gold Medal Park is a stunningly beautiful green space just outside the Guthrie Theatre in Minneapolis. It's so nifty that even the benches are lit up bright blue at night!

Monday, October 27, 2008

Homeless in Los Angeles.

A journalist in LA went undercover as a homeless person to examine what happens when parks become privatized. The author Matthew Fleischer, poses a great question: "In a world that hinges upon cleanliness and safety, what happens when a little dirt gets in?"

The Grove, the Americana’s spiritual antecedent, is the most prominent, and successful, 21st-century attempt of the private sector to fill the void of public life in Los Angeles. Its critics, like those of Disney before it, dismiss the Grove as a manufactured universe free of the gruff realities of urban life. Yet the Grove attracts more people than even Disneyland, while the withered Pan Pacific Park, right next door, offering all the opportunities one could want for “real” public interaction, is barely used.

The Grove is safe and clean because, as a private development, it has control over who and what to allow. Unlike a public park, the Grove can legally toss the overtly political, the intoxicated or the indigent out — eliminating the fringe and ensuring a beigist medium for safe social and commercial interaction among the majority.

Though critics continue to spew impotent rage at the Grove, the space is what it is — a fancy outdoor mall. The Americana, however, while aesthetically and conceptually similar to the Grove, is a much, much different story. It is a strange and uncertain hybrid.

When Rick Caruso agreed to develop the 15.5-acre plot of city land in Glendale that would become the Americana, he assented to creating a new town center — replete with housing, retail and public space. The selling point of the project was the development of a new, 2-acre park at its center, which would be open for public use. Glendale agreed to provide the land for the entire development, free of charge, with the condition that the city would retain ownership of the park. Caruso Affiliated would be responsible for its design and maintenance.

The result is what L.A. Times architecture critic Christopher Hawthorne describes as “a public space masquerading as private space that is masquerading as public.”

Or, as Hemingway might have said, the park is a park is a park is an onion.

Makes you really appreciate our great parks here in Columbus. If you haven't checked them out, all the info for the parks in the Columbus metropolitan can be found here. My personal favorite is Sharon Woods, but they're all great. Take advantage of them!