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In the urban green revolution, small is big
by
Suzuki, David
in
Burnham, Daniel P
2014
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In the urban green revolution, small is big
by
Suzuki, David
in
Burnham, Daniel P
2014
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Newspaper Article
In the urban green revolution, small is big
2014
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Overview
This spring, residents successfully funded a project to replace the entire stretch of asphalt with a large pollinatorfriendly garden. There's even talk of removing the fence. The ripple effect: People from nearby streets have started organizing their own interventions, like a pollinator garden at the neighbourhood daycare and moss graffiti in an alleyway. As resident Anjum Chagpar said, \"Inspiration breeds inspiration. Simple, fun interventions are contagious.\" Replacing pavement with a pollinator garden on one small street won't solve the vast issues our communities face, but little spaces perhaps hold the greatest potential. To make our cities truly green, we must bring nature to the oft-neglected bits between parks and existing green areas. Streets and sidewalks alone account for about 80 per cent of a city's public space. Private spaces like yards, rooftops and balconies cover more than half the urban landscape. Stretching our visions of urban green space to include these allows us to reimagine the city as a vibrant green mosaic. So it's no surprise that a growing number of design competitions and events are celebrating urban interventions, from PARK(ing) Day, which highlights the transformation of parking spots into temporary public spaces in 35 countries, to 100-in-1 Day, which will be held this year on June 7 in Toronto, Halifax and Vancouver to celebrate citizen-led initiatives that \"raise awareness of urban and social issues, inspire ideas, and motivate leaders to consider new approaches to old problems.\"
Publisher
Postmedia Network Inc
Subject
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