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Missed last week's webinar with our friends at AARP Livable Communities? You can still learn all about their Community
Challenge grant program and how your community can apply by tuning into the recording.
Watch now.
June 15-18, 2021
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Conference: Walk/Bike/Places
North America's premier conference for walking, biking and placemaking professionals is back! Our early bird registration rate ends March 29, 2021.
Register
now.
More Events & Opportunities
Mar. 15-18, 2021 •
Conference: InTents: The Farmers Market Conference 2021, featuring PPS's
Kelly Verel and
Kurt Wheeler on creating local conditions to build better markets
Mar. 19, 2021 •
Conference Session: Streets for People: How a Pandemic and Advanced Mobility Are Changing Our Relationship to the Street, Urbanism Next Virtual Forum 2021 featuring PPS's
Alessandra Galletti
Mar. 22, 2021 •
Publication Launch: Engaging Black People and Power, Jay Pitter, York University & the Canadian Urban Institute
April 12-14 • Conference:
Main Street Now, Main Street America
April 18-25, 2021 •
Global Event: Placemake Earth Challenge, PlacemakingUS (orientation
is March 12)
Apr. 30, 2021 •
Grant: Asphalt Art Initiative, Bloomberg Philanthropies
May 19-21, 2021 •
Conference: CNU 29. Design for Change, Congress for the New Urbanism
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A STAR Is Born.
In most of the U.S., a 911 call brings the police, regardless of the reason for the call. But thanks to Denver's six-month-old STAR program, if you dial 911 in that city, you might be greeted instead by a mental-health clinician and a paramedic driving a customized
van equipped with food, water, and blankets. (Curbed)
After the Monument Comes Down. Amid calls for racial justice, at least 160 Confederate symbols were removed from U.S. cities last year. But how can a public space promote healing, as well
as end the pain? The transformation of the River Garden (formerly Jefferson Davis Park) in Memphis, Tennessee, offers some lessons. (Next
City)
Public Parking Is Public Space, Too. Wired magazine reports on the many urban designers and placemakers that have long sought to reduce the portion of the public realm that is dedicated
to cars, and how the pandemic gave them a chance to do so. (Wired)
America's Sorriest Bus Stop.
StreetsBlog wants to hear your nominations for the sorriest bus stops in the United States. We've written before about
how a good bus stop can anchor an entire neighborhood, but the sad truth is that few fulfill that potential. (StreetsBlog)
The Mental Health Pandemic. The coronavirus has not been the only public health crisis during the pandemic. Anxiety, drug overdoses have both increased significantly. But social infrastructure
and local leadership can make a big difference. (CItyLab)
The Return of Mass Tourism? In his new book,
The World in a Selfie: An Inquiry Into the Tourist Age, Marco D'Eramo explores the impact tourism has had on our politics, our planet, and our selves. (Critical
Mass)
Repairing the Urban Fabric. With the U.S. Senate considering a $10 billion pilot program to tear down urban highways, Kinder Institute for Urban Research director William Fulton considers
several past and present efforts to knit back together midcentury transportation scars around the country. (Common
Edge)
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Here is a roundup of 10 inspiring placemaking ideas from the week:
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A report on parks as infrastructure for our health, economy and environment (City
Parks Alliance)
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The vicious cycle between unsafe streets and unfair policing in marginalized communities (Transportation
for America)
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The legal battle over a carpenter's efforts to build tiny shelters for people experiencing homeless in Toronto, Ontario (Azure)
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An alley transformation in Ripley, Mississippi, celebrating the blues (Main
Street America)
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A new book on planning cities from the perspective of a child, 95cm off the ground (Planetizen)
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The tiny makeshift roadblocks made from bricks invented by Hong Kong protestors (Dezeen)
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A COVID-friendly program to connect storytelling and public space (Main
Street America)
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A guide to measuring the impact of placemaking projects (Placemaking
Europe)
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The places built for active transportation—but not accessibility (Places
Journal)
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A roundup of PPS Co-Founder
Kathy Madden's four favorite play sculptures (The
Social Life Project)
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