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Park(ing) Day and the power of demonstration

By Jen Petersen on October 12th, 2008. Filed under: Uncategorized

Peering past the protective barriers rimming our 3 spaces-long Seventh Haven Park on the west side of 7th Avenue between 24th and 25th in Manhattan on September 19th, we were the power of demonstration.

At Seventh Haven, neighbors, friends, shopkeepers, grocery store employees, and students became park designer/planners for the day. The street’s generosity was lent for the project, too, demonstrating how malleable it is when the spirit of its engineers prioritize people over automobile speed. Motorists and passersby were wooed by our street possibilities transformation, and inquired with amusement or amazement throughout the day, or else just joined us, choosing to embody the power of demonstration on their own.

Sure Park(ing) Day is whimsical, small scale, and impermanent, but it is also a forceful reappropriation, and for this, people love it; it is empowering!

The need for more green, people-scaled places in which to linger works its way into park(ers) lungs, ears, voices on Park(ing) Day; there’s nothing like high-speed traffic whizzing past an unprotected park(ing) space to underscore traffic’s incompatibility with rich social spaces. But lucky park(ers)! We enjoy the thrill of urban life lived ahead of the curve, nudging the automobile to slow down or stay off the road entirely, by together absorbing the risks of our preferred street vision in the making. And with such a demonstration, we invite neighbors and strangers to do likewise, and imagine post-automobile possibilities!

What could be more powerful?

2 Comments »

  1. It’s a funny double entendre in finding a “lucky park(ing) space,” what with your park(ing)goers and whimsical yet poignant work. I’m heartened by how other cities- San Francisco, Seattle come to mind - have taken back some of the city with car-free days. As you’ve observed elsewhere, the community and the new radiance of the city, when liberated from auto traffic, is restorative. Can’t wait to read more - dd

    Comment by Dan — October 20, 2008 @ 4:38 pm

  2. Nice - well done. Thanks.

    Comment by Ron — December 29, 2008 @ 1:10 pm

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