One Park: A Vision for Baltimore

One Park is a visionary master plan for creating a network of interconnected parks, boulevards, bike paths, and pedestrian ways throughout the city of Baltimore. The plan was conceived by the Parks and People Foundation of Baltimore as a way to “(allow every citizen) to benefit from a green network of open space.” Their [...]

By jonasrisen

One Park Masterplan_Image 02

One Park is a visionary master plan for creating a network of interconnected parks, boulevards, bike paths, and pedestrian ways throughout the city of Baltimore. The plan was conceived by the Parks and People Foundation of Baltimore as a way to “(allow every citizen) to benefit from a green network of open space.” Their goals are to: address public health needs, improve environmental health, unify diverse citizenry and neighborhoods, enhance aesthetics, and market open spaces to users.

The master plan maps are available on the Parks and People website and are arranged in a quasi chronological conceptual order which illustrates how the project would come together.

A recent blog posting on Audacious Ideas discusses the need and relevance of the One Park strategy. The post tells a heartfelt yet practical narrative about the plan and its implementation. Below is a snippet from the original post by Steve Ziger.

“Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men’s blood and probably will not themselves be realized.”
Daniel Burnham, 1846-1912, architect and urban visionary

Imagine a Baltimore where everyone lived within a few blocks of a park. Where you could walk easily throughout the city in a safe green network that connects school playgrounds, tree-lined boulevards, community gardens, college campuses, public golf courses, recreational areas and parks. As you walked, people would be commuting on bicycle trails or participating in marathons. Children would plant and care for trees as a part of their environmental curriculum. Neighbors would grow their own vegetables. Our extensive canopy of trees would provide shade, filter pollution, and help with rainwater.Baltimore would become known as a city in a park, attracting businesses, residents, and visitors.Tax revenues would increase along with property values. Communities would come together. The healthier environment would improve our public health, with cleaner air and water, and lots of great reasons to be outside.

ONE PARK is no little plan. It is a simple vision to inspire and direct the future of our beloved Baltimore.

From these words, I am already imagining myself engaging the One Park system during my daily routine of living in Baltimore. Commuting. Socializing. Exercising. Relaxing.

I grew up in a very pastoral setting in South Louisiana and can attest to the fact that parks do not solve issues related to wealth inequality, crime, and education. These problems exist in the greenest of communities all over the world and their cause is not the presence or lack of open space.

To me the issue is “quality of life.” In a “flat” globalized world, cities and regions must compete openly for all available resources, tangible and intangible. “Quality of life” attracts a human capital, a creative class, which directly feeds a vibrant local economy.

People do and will have the freedom to relocate to areas they feel are more habitable. Older east coast cities already have dense fabrics, history, and culture which make them attractive places. However, they also have harsh urban landscapes that are hard to escape and detract from their livability.

The One Park vision should be developed and funded because it will make Baltimore a wonderful city in which to live. People will visit and want to return. Residents will decide to stay and invest more of their energy into their community. Businesses will follow. Everyone will benefit.

One Park Masterplan_Image 01

Tags: , , , , , ,

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *

*
*
  • News

  • <?php the_title(); ?>
  • 18.Aug
  • ‘Community Greens’: Greening Baltimore’s Alleys
  • Above is an aerial photo of Baltimore showing some official green space and some potential alley green space - in green - quite a web if coordinated to work together!
    ‘Community Greens‘ is an organization which supports the ‘development of shared green spaces inside residential blocks in cities across the United States’ by taking the stand [...]

  • Products

  • <?php the_title(); ?>
  • 17.Aug
  • Litracon: Light-transmitting Concrete
  • Litracon is a light-transmitting concrete product able to move light through concrete up to 20 meters thick. The product is composed of roughly 4% optical glass fibers placed parallel within a fine concrete mix. The result in a homogeneous material from exterior surface to center which retains the compressive strength qualities of concrete. The [...]

  • Case Studies

  • <?php the_title(); ?>
  • 23.Jun
  • Kelvin’s Conjecture: The Sustainability of Optimization and Integration
  • ”to make as effective, perfect, or useful as possible“ -Definition ‘Optimize’
    The National Aquatic Center in Beijing achieves sustainability through the optimization and integration of its structure, envelope, and building systems. In doing so it tells the story of how a little known problem of theoretical physics, Kelvin’s Conjecture, influenced the design of a prominent international [...]

  • Energy

  • <?php the_title(); ?>
  • 07.Sep
  • Energy Certificates: Nutrition Facts for European Buildings
  • Energy Certificates, also called Energy Passports, are documents that profile the energy performance of existing and new buildings within the European Union. The program was initiated as part of the EU Directive on the Energy Performance of Buildings in January of 2006 and will be mandatory throughout the member countries. The goal is to provide [...]

  • Environment

  • <?php the_title(); ?>
  • 02.Sep
  • FerroFluids: Physics is Beautiful
  • Immanuel Kant, in 1790, described beauty as ’sensory, emotional, and intellectual,’ a synthesis of data which we as humans process when evaluating objects. More recently Abraham Moles, Frieder Nake and Jurgen Schmidhuber, leaders in the field of aesthetics and information theory, described beauty as ‘the option with the shortest description, given the observer’s previous knowledge [...]

  • Events

  • <?php the_title(); ?>
  • 07.Nov
  • Greenbuild 2007 - Now Online!
  • Greenbuild, one the premier green building conferences in the United States, starts today in Chicago.  For those of us who couldn’t make the trip (including yours truly, currently sitting at his desk in Baltimore), there is now a way to catch some of the action online:  Greenbuild 365.
    Sponsored by the United States Green Building Council, [...]

About Greenline

Greenline is an open forum run by the GreenTeam at Ziger/Snead LLP Architects.

Our mission is to collect and share news and information on building technology, strategies, and products both within our office and with consultants, clients and future building occupants. We believe that education is fundamental to good design work, and so we have designed this blog as a resource to learn, explore and share topics such as high performance building, sustainable design, innovative products, health and productivity in buildings, and design aesthetics.

Save or Share