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Can
we have distinguished yet united neighborhoods?
Landscapes,
natural and built, are the city’s connective
tissue; they define neighborhoods, and are to be
preserved as the public realm. – John
Nolen, 1927
Being surround by natural beauty, our unique landscape
gifts us with the opportunity to create a space
like no other.
Imagine the possibilities we can fashion…
Sun drenched open spaces with room for summer concerts,
soccer games, fall football.
Tree-lined promenades filled with sounds of birds
and splashes of colorful flora, encircled by park
benches for neighborly gatherings. Grassy medians
giving neighbors a place to acquaint their pets
and the neighborhood.
Commemorative plazas with whimsical fountains, or
an urban canyon surrounded by cascading water.
Tranquil reflective areas with shady tree clusters
and changes in elevation. Here we might quietly
become engrossed in a contemplative book, or deepen
mind-body awareness through meditation or yoga.
Residential units with stoops and porches facing
an internal park. Public greens for greeting neighbors
and passers-by.
Artistic transit corridors marked by innovative
street art embedded in wide sidewalks and building
walls, or in water bubbling into clever sitting
areas.
Green
beaches throughout the city, where grass meets water;
perfect for pulling off your shoes and enjoying
your bare feet sliding through the velvety smooth
grass.
Corridor streets becoming metropolitan walkways
with distinctive sidewalk patterns, shimmering lights
and water, walkable art treating our mind and senses.
Natural features like earthquake faults becoming
public canyon pathways wrapping around Downtown,
encircling the community.
Imagine connecting Downtown’s open spaces
with meandering paths and urban trails enabling
us to connect with our city’s feel and create
a special sense of place all our own.
The possibilities are limitless.
What if each developer believed in this vision and
designed a portion of their projects for citywide
welcoming and socializing? What if developers make
it a priority to create visual connections between
their landscapes and the neighborhood?
With inspiration and planning, can we construct
a unique artistic and community style for each neighborhood,
as well as tie them all together to form a cohesive
Downtown community?
I contemplate… Can we have distinguished yet
united neighborhoods?
The streets of each neighborhood need areas of vegetation,
street trees, spots for color and texture and shade.
The remembrances of water and the bay need to be
punctuated along the path. The buildings need to
embrace the street with porches, galleries, stoops
and windows that provide verity to the sidewalk
edge. Mark Manske (Treo@Kettner)
The San Diego lifestyle is all about the outdoors.
The most successful architecture blurs the lines
between inside and outside. Petar
Perisic (Park @ 10th Ave)
To make 'community' you have to make public places.
We've done a good job at building the individual
private places - it's now time for tree lined streets,
active plazas and beautiful parks to link us together.
Marty Poirier (Kettner
Row)
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