Great Concept... San Francisco never seizes to be a great example.
http://sfpavementtoparks.sfplanning.org/
A great kid-friendly environment and learning experience!
Friday, March 25, 2011
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Sunday, January 2, 2011
Austin Fails to Meet National Benchmarks on Park Access
When it comes to measuring how family-friendly a city's parks are, one of the most important benchmarks is access: that is, how many families can actually walk to a park from their homes. A new study by the Austin Parks and Recreation Department looking at park access shows Austin performs very poorly: Only 47% of the population lives within walking distance to a park (1/4 to 1/2 mile). In the urban core, where denser housing and less access to private open space is becoming more of the norm, Austin performs even more poorly: only 42% live of Austinites live within walking distance of a park.
Here is what we can aspire to as a city:
Here is what we can aspire to as a city:
- In Boston, 97% of children live within 1/4 mile of a park. Only 2,900 children do not live within walking access of a park.
- In New York City, 91% of children live within ¼ mile of a park
- In San Francisco, 85% of children live within ¼ mile of a park.
- In Denver, more than 90% of residents live within 6 walkable blocks of a park, which is tracked with GIS analyses to ensure the parks are safely accessible by pedestrians. The city recently raised the park accessibility goal to 4 blocks for urban areas.
- Seattle has a 1/8-mile goal for urban parks in urban areas, and ¼ to ½ mile for neighborhood parks. More than 79% of children live within ¼ mile of a park.
- Minneapolis adopted its 6-block goal more than fifty years ago, and now more than 99.4% of the city’s residents live within 6 blocks of a park.
- In Chicago, more than 90% of the city’s 2.9 million residents live within ½ mile of a park or play lot. The City’s current goal is for each city resident to live within 1/10 mile from a “mini park” in urban areas, ¼ mile from neighborhood parks, and ½ mile from community parks.
More on this important topic in future postings.
Sunday, November 14, 2010
PARD Urban Parks Workgroup Outlines Strategies Urban Pocket Parks
On November 1st the PARD Urban Parks Workgroup presented to the Council Subcommittee on Comprehensive Planning and Transportation draft recommendations on how to create enough parks in the central city for everyone to live within a 1/4 mile walking distance of a park. Looking at issues such as accessibility, childhood obesity, maintenance budgets, and design innovations the Workgroup made a series of initial policy recommendations for both City Council and PARD. Take a look at the draft recommendations and the PowerPoint they used to present. The final report will be out in about a month.
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Family-Friendly Places from trip to Southeastern United States
Here are photos of family-friendly play spaces we came across during a recent trip to the Southeastern United States:
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Family Fun at Lake Austin

When people think of Central Texas, a lot of the times they think of scorching hot summers - and they're right on the money. But despite the summer heat I've experience in Central Texas over my past four years in Austin, I have been able to find my 'happy place.' Each summer has brought on a new hobby, all involving the relief of some very refreshing water. I've taken up kayaking Lady Bird Lake, swimming in Barton Springs Pool or Barton Creek Greenbelt, and riding my bike by Liz Carpenter Fountain in Butler Park, to name a few.
This summer, I joined a boat share and added a few more past-times spending time on Lake Austin. It has been wonderful to get out on the water, wake board, relax and enjoy time with good friends. It bothered me however that the vast majority of the Austin Metro population probably does not have access to a boat, so they don't get to experience the lakes of central Texas the way I have. Fortunately, I found great spots to spend a summer day in Austin - no boat required!This is a beautiful, 1100+ acre waterfront park that offers a variety of recreational activities including: swimming, volleyball, hiking, biking, waterfront camping and many others. There is a small fee per vehicle for use of the park. you need to share a lot more info and tidbits.2. Ski Shores Cafe http://www.facebook.com/skishorescafe
This bar and restaurant offers a very family-friendly environment on Lake Austin with kid-friendly movies on the big screen, a fire pit for s'mores and storytelling, a large playscape, live music, washer pits and a large lawn to run around in. You can enjoy football games on the flatscreen tv's and grab a meal while the kids can enjoy watching the boats pass by or explore the playground. The great balance makes it a comfortable spot for the whole family.
I found this business plan intriguing, with excellent potential in a variety of contexts. Waterfront land is becoming so expensive, it is financially difficult to create a multitude of public access points. In this case, Ski Shores Cafe seized the opportunity to create one of the few family-friendly, affordable waterfront environments in Central Texas.
I thought about how this concept might work on Lady Bird Lake, and how nice it would be to paddle up to a restaurant via kayak or canoe, and enjoy dining with the family, then head off to watch the bats from the water. Or, what if there was a playscape component and waterfront plaza at the boat launch off Scenic Drive by Oyster Landing. What about a public, designated swim access that is linked to the trail system of downtown? Could there be an ecologically appropriate beach or something that provides the same uses as a beach?
Despite everything I imagine, the reality is that we have family-friendly environments in the City of Austin. However, our population is growing rapidly, and public open space can become congested. We as a community need to make sure we are always taking in what's going on around us and thinking of ways to designate open space for the community.Please feel free to share any similar or unique experiences and also ideas you may have for the future!
Friday, April 2, 2010
Austin City Council Announces New Goal: Everyone Should Live Within Walking Distance of a Park
The Austin City Council has set a new goal for the City that everyone in the urban core should be able to live within walking distance of a park. In a resolution adopted in late 2009, the City Council set a urban parks goal of 1/4-mile to 1/2-mile walking distance of every resident. The City asked the City Manager to create a working group to develop an implementation plan to reach the new urban parks goal. The plan will include strategies to incorporate more innovative and diverse play opportunities for children in parks.
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