SMART CITY MIAMI®Magazine - SUSTAINABLE CITIES EXPERIENCES

Page 72

QUALITY OF LIFE Kalasatama, Helsinki Kalasatama is a brand-new district in Helsinki where Parkly created a pocket park, which successfully tackled the challenges like the lack of greenery in streetscapes and a lack of community in a newly built area.

POCKET PARKS BY DANIEL BUMANN

Welcoming public places are important for the overall development of cities.

I

’d like to share some insights we have learned with three pocket park projects that Parkly has executed with the City of Helsinki. Kalasatama The word Kalasatama would be translated as “fish harbor” in English. It used to be a harbor not too many years ago. And now, it has been turned into an area predominantly for housing. They’re building thousands of newly built flats; the whole area is completely new. There are challenges associated with it, such as the lack of green space, the lack of identification, lack of community, and lack of services. The City of Helsinki asked us to test a small pocket park to see how this would help the residents build a sense of community. So, we have been planting edible plants and herbs that residents can pick and cook with. We have also attached sensors, which can measure, for instance, the number of people using these places daily. This helps the city understand the real needs of such an area. The feedback was predominantly good. People have been using the area way more. The safety feel has been rising. There was also feedback that people feel more active and that they get to learn the community much better. It is especially hard for new-build areas to create a sense of community and identity for a place. This newly built pocket park has been used a

lot, especially by children and families. It has also led to people encountering each other more, which is a very important thing for the resilience of an area. Vuosaari This is a very diverse part of the city. But as is common in the suburbs, there has been a lack of architectural vision, resulting in many abandoned spaces, wasteland, and nondefined environments. There is a cultural center that was built roughly 10 years ago with a beautiful big space in front that had absolutely no function whatsoever. We were asked by the City of Helsinki, together with the stakeholder Vuotalo, which is the cultural center, to turn this place around and to activate this area to bring more life onto the street, raise the safety feel, and also add new functions that are of use for the people of that district. Public seating is often underestimated as simply a bench, a place to sit down and rest. But it is much more than this. It creates places to meet and greet, exchange with each other, have encounters, and rest and look at the city from a different perspective. You don’t need to rush. You take a breath and sit down. And this is what it is all about. One thing is to see our ultimate vicinity as a huge potential to create a nice environment where we can work, live, meet people,

Daniel Bumann Co-Founder, Parkly Helsinki, Finland Daniel Bumann is co-founder of RaivioBumann, a public art, placemaking and urban design studio. There, he co-founded Parkly to fast-track the transformation of public places and accelerate sustainable urban change. Bumann believes that happy places and happy people go hand in hand.

72 | Smart City Miami

© PARKLY

and exchange. We have also, on request, installed a book-exchange cupboard, which to everyone’s surprise, is vividly in use. People bring their books, pick up others. It’s another way of getting in touch with each other. The learnings from this testing phase are being used for a future architectural competition that will take place, and it will possibly help to build the environment that the people really need. Kauppatori This area in the center of Helsinki is a prime location, and the city has had no better function for it than a parking lot. So, one summer, we took the cars away and started to refurbish the area. It was only after a couple of minutes that the place was filled with people enjoying themselves, and no further service was needed. It was beautiful to see how people adopted a new place. It also gave them a new perspective on an area they have passed by but never had the chance to embrace. It also helped the local businesses get more foot traffic and more potential clients. With these cases, I hope you see how easy it is to turn places around, to change people’s narrative, and shift perspective away from an underused space into something that can potentially change an area. It’s always fantastic to see how little it actually takes to change the narrative, to make people understand more about their own environment and raise the sense of communal spirits. To summarize these three pilot projects, we learned that people want to rediscover their environment from a new perspective. People want to feel safe. People want to get together. All they need is places.


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Articles inside

Investing in Racial Equity Through Small-Scale Manufacturing

11min
pages 82-88

Circle Scan

4min
page 81

Entrepreneurship for Sustainability

3min
page 80

Urban Playground: How Child-Friendly Planning & Design Can Save Cities

3min
page 78

Humans + Nature + Mindfulness Resilient Sustainable Cities

3min
page 77

Creating Child-Friendly Smart Cities

3min
page 79

Architects as Healers: Buildings as Medicine

6min
pages 74-75

Health Tech Will Make Smart Cities Smarter

3min
page 76

Visual Utopias

3min
page 73

Pocket Parks

4min
page 72

Claiming Safe Streets for Livable Cities

4min
pages 70-71

America’s Top 100 Bicycling Cities

6min
pages 66-67

Where Are Self-Driving Cars Taking Us?

3min
page 68

Smart Design in Dutch Cities

3min
page 69

Urban Mobility: Bicycles, E-Cargo Bikes & the City

7min
pages 64-65

Building the Future of Sustainable Government

7min
pages 62-63

Water as Leverage for Sustainable Development

5min
pages 54-55

Financing Green Resilient Urban Infrastructure

4min
page 61

Miami and South Florida in 2050 A Dispatch from the Future

3min
page 59

Living Seawalls: Bringing Marine Life Back to Concrete Coastlines

3min
page 60

Integrating Equity into Climate Planning

3min
page 58

Transforming Streets to Adapt to Climate Change

2min
page 56

Choosing Change: How Bold Mindsets Will Save the World

4min
page 57

If We Act Together: Keeping 1.5ºC Alive

5min
pages 52-53

Next-Generation Infrastructure & Sustainable Mobility for Smart Cities

2min
page 51

Smart and Resilient Cities Tools for City Leadership

3min
page 49

Digital Twin: Collaborative Subsurface Infrastructure

3min
page 50

Greening Our Gray Cities with Nature-Based Solutions

6min
pages 46-47

Investing in the Future Smart and Sustainable Tourism

4min
page 48

Bangkok: Porous City

1min
pages 44-45

Transforming the City

3min
page 43

The Race to Resilience

3min
page 42

The Future of Work Civic Innovation in the New Economy

8min
pages 28-29

Kyiv Smart City: Digital Infrastructure

6min
pages 40-41

Coral Gables Resilient Smart Districts

5min
pages 32-33

Future City: Resilient by Data Adoptive by Design

3min
page 34

Better Governance, Better Livelihood, Better Industry

7min
pages 36-37

The Case for an Innovation Agenda that Is Social in Nature

6min
pages 30-31

Smart & Sustainable Urbanism

3min
page 35

Digital Transformation with Sustainable Standards

6min
pages 38-39

Why Mayors Should Rule the World

8min
pages 18-19

Why It Is Time to Reevaluate the Function of a City

6min
pages 26-27

Smart Cities Are Resilient Cities

6min
pages 20-21

Miami: Sustainable & Resilient

4min
pages 14-15

The Need for Developing Nations’ Model of Smart Cities

3min
page 24

Miami-Dade County: Climate Action

6min
pages 16-17

The Emergence of a Human-Centric Data-Driven Community

5min
pages 22-23

Innovation Guerilla Against Bureaucracy

3min
page 25
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