Our cities and places are no longer ours. Our lives are zoned like we're a resource to be managed...I wanted to live in a world that was an expression of who we are. --Mark Lakeman
Good News of the Day:
"That's public space. Nobody can us it." That was one Portland city official's response when Mark Lakeman and his neighbors first began building unauthorized gathering places in their neighborhood in 1996. To Lakeman, an urban designer, this seemed like a a fundamental misunderstanding of public space. Together with his neighbors, he formed the City Repair Project, a volunteer-run nonprofit that set out to change the way Portlanders think about the places where people come together. Starting by redesigning their own intersection, the group went on to organize neighbors, build benches, and paint streets throughout the city. Now, neighborhoods around the country are trying out City Repair's methods, and the city of Portland even passed an ordinance allowing neighborhoods to build gathering places in street intersections! [ more ] Submitted by: Adam Clark and Pancho Ramos-Stierle
Be The Change: Learn more about City Repair, and how you can start rebuilding your own neighborhood: [ more ]
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