Category: Back of the Envelope
Get to Know the Awkwardly-Named “Terminated Vista”
I’ll admit it: I wish there was a more user-friendly way to say “terminated vista.”
Perhaps I’m more sensitive to it because, as regular readers here know, I’m not an urban designer. I just work with them. That means I’m more inclined to scratch my head like any other layperson when I hear wonky expressions... Continue Reading
Designing Regional Urban Retail Centers: Lessons from the Mall and Beyond
As many of us are actively trying to reform car-focused retail into dynamic mixed-use, walkable urban centers, we are quick to point at the mall as the poster child for everything we are trying to reform. But as the heyday of last-century's drive-to mall fades into the past, there are many things that the mall excelled... Continue Reading
Tags Geoff Dyer, Robert Gibbs
Public Process: Don’t botch your online engagement
If you’re a city or town, it’s a fair bet you’ve long since accepted the internet. People meet, pay bills, go shopping, research causes and self-diagnose illness online, and they expect to engage government in similarly convenient ways. You’re fine with that. In turn, you’ve responded with all the things they’ve... Continue Reading
Category Back of the Envelope, Public Engagement
The goal is not engagement. It’s disengagement.
What counts as a win in public engagement?
It’s not uncommon for municipalities -- and consultants -- to “score” engagement as though it were a contest. The most points win. And you accumulate points by counting how many: How many notices issued and media employed. How many seats filled. How many ideas collected. Continue Reading
Category Back of the Envelope, Public Engagement
B-Grid Be Good
The B-Grid: A traditional city building pattern common in early western settlements, particularly on the more rectilinear grid-iron pattern of streets.
Typically, Main Street was the "A" street: a high quality, pedestrian-oriented space lined with continuous shopfronts and important civic buildings. But what about larger... Continue Reading
Category Back of the Envelope
Tags Geoff Dyer