Residents use 'tactical urbanism' to ward off overcrowding at inner-city parks
CBC
As more people move into Calgary's inner-city neighbourhoods, community leaders worry they'll put pressure on park spaces and amenities.
That's one reason Adam Schwartz is trying to help build new ones. He works for the Federation of Calgary Communities, approving grants and helping volunteers navigate city bylaws to create 30 small park projects a year.
On a recent summer afternoon, he played bump at a basketball court at one such project — a court, picnic area and playground outside the Christian Life Assembly church in Calgary's southwest.
It was just a parking lot last year. Now, it's a place where residents can grab sushi or won ton soup at the nearby restaurants, and then meet neighbours and sit on patio furniture as others come out to shoot hoops.
"This project hit my inbox over the winter and then it's up mid-summer. Like, that's a quick turnaround to get a brand new community park space. So I think that's the beauty of tactical urbanism," said Schwartz, amazed at how fast a project can come together outside a government bureaucracy.
"We're seeing our city growing … there's obviously concerns around how packed parks might get, or how overrun infrastructure and amenities might get. It's super important that communities kind of lead the charge on some of these projects and say what they want and do it."
City council has been trying to encourage more inner-city density. In Killarney, Glengarry and Richmond, the neighbourhoods around Christian Life Assembly, many bungalows are being torn down and replaced with duplexes or fourplexes. Several large infill sites are slated for highrise towers.
The federation's ActivateYYC grant offers $1,000 to $5,000 to help community residents add amenities.
It's not a lot, says Schwartz, but it can be a start. He said the program helped create the first mini version of the now permanent Flyover Park under Fourth Avenue, and Under the Rainbow, a space under a bridge in Sunnyside that was dingy and is now a brightly-coloured point of pride for the community.
Jeremy Pham came up with the idea for the Christian Life Assembly park, at Richmond Road and 28th Street S.W. He's an urban planning student at the University of Calgary who grew up going to this church.
He says the key to making the park work was to bring many different activities together in one space. There's a sandbox for young children, but also soft lighting and comfortable chairs for adults. And he's not surprised the basketball court has been popular as there are no others nearby.
Also, the fact it's close to the shops means it's convenient. It's not like other parks that are often surrounded only by backyards and houses.
It's part of a wave of new ideas in planning, he said, different to what was common when these neighbourhoods were first built around the 1950s.
"In the 20th century, they put a lot of focus on travel efficiency. Now we're starting to realize in planning that there's other factors in the city that we want to focus on. Not just travel efficiency, but spaces for people to gather, interact with each other. I think those spaces are important to build community."