PPS to Hold New Transportation Training Seminar in New York City, November 29-30
Come to "Streets as Places", PPS's new training seminar, and learn how Placemaking can build great streets and great communities.
The course will introduce participants to new ways of thinking about streets as public spaces. It is intended for anyone who is interested in creating a great street, including transportation professionals who want to learn more about how streets can help to build communities, civic and elected officials who realize that greater economic impact can result from changing the way that roads are designed, and citizen activists who understand that the time to change is now.
Presentations and discussion will center on how streets, roads, and transit facilities can be designed and managed to benefit communities, in addition to serving mobility needs. Practical tools for assessing a variety of street typologies and case studies of cities which have moved beyond solving mobility problems to community building will be presented, and participants will be encouraged to discuss their own projects as well as share experiences and ideas with each other.
The training session will include a walking tour and discussion of some of the recent street improvement projects in New York City, an on-site Placemaking street audit, seminar-style lectures, and open discussions about current transportation issues and challenges facing cities today.
For more information and to register, visit the event homepage.
02:43 PM, 16 Oct 2007
by Ben Fried
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Melbourne, Australia After a Decade of Focus on Public Spaces [www.streetsblog.org]
Project for Public Spaces Vice President, Ethan Kent, writes about Melbourne's successful new public space development, Federation Square, and a Placemaking training course that he helped lead, which included many city staff, local developers and "place managers."
01:19 PM, 03 Aug 2007
by Katie Salay
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People and Activity Bring Vitality to Communities [www.northshoreoutlook.com]
Fred Kent believes that you can have the most attractively built community in the world, but if people don't come together to mix in public spaces, it's just dead space.
His theory is that attractive, non-automobile dominated public spaces layered with multi-use functions will pump vitality back into communities that have become too isolated.
12:20 PM, 22 May 2007
by Katie Salay
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Brian Ray attended PPS's training course "How to Turn a Place Around," and writes a review of his experience learning a new approach to designing great public spaces.
01:38 PM, 15 May 2007
by Katie Salay
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Interview with Fred Kent in Urban Land [www.pps.org]
This interview with Fred Kent appeared in the February 2007 issue of Urban Land:
"As an internationally known advocate for public spaces, Fred Kent, founder of the New York-based Project for Public Spaces (PPS), sees cities - and the people who inhabit them - through the measured senses of an urban provocateur."
12:10 PM, 21 Mar 2007
by Katie Salay
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Although New York prides itself on its public life, New Yorkers inhabit a public realm that pales beside what it could become. "After working in cities around the world, we've developed a rich understanding of public spaces that begs to be put to use back in our home town," explains PPS President Fred Kent. "New York can benefit from our experience and become an even greater city in the 21st century."
Museum Mile Festival, 5th Avenue
Read this special issue of PPS's newsletter Making Places, which includes the city commentary, New York great public spaces and hidden gems, and the places that provide the biggest opportunities for improvement.
02:09 PM, 08 Mar 2007
by Katie Salay
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Fred Kent on What Makes a Great Waterfront - Radio Interview [www.kpbs.org]
09:13 AM, 01 Mar 2007
by Katie Salay
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01:12 PM, 16 Feb 2007
by Katie Salay
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Making Hell's Kitchen Less Hellish [www.streetsblog.org]
07:28 AM, 12 Jan 2007
by Katie Salay
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PPS Client Wins Grand Award [www.mtc.ca.gov]
Congratulations to the San Jose/Guerrero Coalition to Save Our Streets, co-recipient of the 2006 Grand Award, given by the Metropolitan Transportation Commission in San Francisco.
The Coalition of neighborhood activists successfully transformed a dangerous 6-lane arterial into a traffic-calmed street with wide medians, safe pedestrian crossings, and bike lanes. PPS worked with the Coalition to create a Neighborhood Plan, to further redevelop the neighborhood's streets into great public spaces.
Read more about PPS's work with the San Jose/Guerrero Coalition to Save our Streets here.
Less room for cars translates to more room for bicyclists. (Photo: Noah Berger)
12:13 PM, 04 Jan 2007
by Katie Salay
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Position Available: Transportation and Placemaking Project Manager,
Read more about this position at: http://www.pps.org/info/aboutpps/jobopenings
08:05 AM, 10 Oct 2006
by Katie Salay
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Making Room for Happy People in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia [thechronicleherald.ca]
Reduce traffic volume and make room for happier citizens, urged workshop leaders from the New York-based Project for Public Spaces. Kathy Madden, Cynthia Nikitin, and Kathleen Ziegenfuss trained about 50 provincial politicians, municipal planners, librarians and others interested in community development, in simple low-cost techniques to revitalize neighbourhoods.
07:59 AM, 21 Sep 2006
by Katie Salay
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The Art of Placemaking: A Conversation with Fred Kent [www.urbanitebaltimore.com]
An interview with Fred Kent, President and founder of PPS, on what it means to create a great place and why the concept of Placemaking has gone international.
08:39 AM, 09 Aug 2006
by Katie Salay
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PPS Brings Placemaking Training to Bellingham, WA [www.cob.org]
Fred Kent, Ethan Kent, and Juliette Michaelson of PPS visited Bellingham, WA last week, and trained 75 city staff, council members, and community leaders in the principles and techniques of Placemaking.
The Mayor of Bellingham, Mark Asmundson, who has also attended PPS's "How to Turn a Place Around" training, wrote this article on the experience and poses the question, What if we designed Bellingham around places?
07:32 AM, 06 Jul 2006
by Katie Salay
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Blueprint Developed for Better Delaney Park Strip [www.adn.com]
09:41 AM, 15 May 2006
by Kathleen Ziegenfuss
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Upcoming PPS Training Courses
Project for Public Spaces invites you to its popular "How to Create Successful Public Markets" workshop on May 11-12, 2006 and "How to Turn a Place Around" workshop on May 4-5, 2006 in New York City.
HOW TO CREATE SUCCESSFUL MARKETS www.pps.org/info/ppsnews/markets_training_course
Is a two-day workshop led by our own public market experts Steve Davies and David O'Neil. Cities and towns across the US are rediscovering the benefits of public markets.
At this workshop, you will:
Learn how to start a market in your neighborhood or town; look at case studies and explore the market planning process, including goal-setting, concept development, economic feasibility, management, site selection and design; visit and analyze some of New York's most famous markets -- both indoor and outdoor; and meet other folks from around the country working on a variety of public market projects.
The registration fee covers two days of tuition, including tours, in-depth presentations and discussions, on-site evaluation, case studies, and training support materials. Light lunch and refreshments will be provided on both Thursday and Friday. There is a reception Thursday evening (included) and an optional dinner Friday night (please note, the dinner is not included in the fee.)
Sign up now and join a small, dynamic group of people which in past workshops has included mayors, planning officials, community development officials, neighborhood organizers and market sponsors.
About the instructors:
STEVE DAVIES, as senior vice president of PPS, has directed nearly 500 major projects in the U.S and abroad and is sought out as one of the foremost thought leaders in public markets. He oversees the activities of PPS's Public Market Program, where he currently works on a multi-million dollar grant-making and policy initiative for public markets and farmers markets with the Ford Foundation and W.K. Kellogg Foundation.
A specialist in all phases of market development, DAVID O'NEIL has worked on over 200 market projects around the world and has directed four international public market conferences, the most recent in October, 2005 in Washington DC. David recently published "Reading Terminal Market: An Illustrated History," a beautifully illustrated narrative about one of the country's largest public markets located in Philadelphia, PA.
For more information about the workshop, or to register online now, go to http://www.pps.org/info/ppsnews/markets_training_course
For additional inquiries, please contact Chris Heitmann at 212-620-5660.
HOW TO TURN A PLACE AROUND
http://www.pps.org/info/ppsnews/httapa_training_course
How to Turn a Place Around is a two-day workshop designed for professionals and non-professionals who help shape towns and cities -- from highway engineers and real estate developers to community garden advocates and housing specialists. Based on PPS's 30 years of experience in Placemaking, and inspired by our popular book, "How to Turn a Place Around," the course shows step-by-step our unique approach to revitalization.
During the course, participants will spend two days exploring the principles of making places through walking tours, presentations, case studies, PPS's Place Performance Evaluation Game, and the close examination of several contrasting neighborhoods. The sites will be used to illustrate complexities in making places, encourage a user's point of view, and to provide insight into how public spaces function.
The registration fee covers two days of tuition, including a neighborhood tour, in-depth presentations and discussions, on-site evaluation, case studies, a copy of How to Turn a Place Around, and training support materials. Light lunch and refreshments will be provided on both Thursday and Friday. There is a reception Thursday evening (included) and we will make recommendations for dinner Friday night should you want to continue the discussion (not included in the fee).
To register and for more information, please visit the workshop webpage, www.pps.org/info/ppsnews/httapa_training_course or contact Kathleen Ziegenfuss at 212-620-5660.
07:23 AM, 21 Mar 2006
by Nick Grossman
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