New Guide Will Help You Take Action in the Streets

April 1, 2016

NOTE: Images in this archived article have been removed.

Image RemovedMike Lydon / A hands-on workshop with Auckland Transport included a demonstration bikeway project.

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Maybe you’ve heard about Tactical Urbanism—a neighborhood building approach that harnesses the ingenuity and spirit of communities to quickly improve city life. Perhaps you’ve read our book, and learned how city dwellers and city leaders around the globe are using this approach for everything from guerilla wayfinding to pop-up retail and ‘quick-build’ traffic calming.

If these projects inspire you, it’s probably time to launch an intervention of your own. Maybe you are a community activist who wants to create a temporary protected bike lane to show city leaders and your neighbors how to make streets safer for all. Or, perhaps you are a city engineer wanting to advance that street redesign project sitting on the shelf and realize that working with community groups and utilizing low-cost temporary materials could help your department test various project elements before capital dollars are expended. But you might also have a lot of questions: What materials should you use, and how? How much do they cost? Will I need a permit? What’s the safest, most effective way to get the project done?

Whether coming from clients, activists, or community-minded business owners, these questions are among the most common we’re asked to answer. However, we’ve learned that sharing best practices one city, one advocacy organization at a time is not the most effective way to transfer knowledge. So here’s the good news: Street Plans is developing a series of new resources to get these and many other questions answered and your project under way.

"The Tactical Urbanist’s Guide to Materials and Design" will provide high-quality, engineer-approved guidance for implementing a range of interventions intended to make streets safe. In line with the Vision Zero goal of ending all traffic fatalities, the Guide focuses on rapidly implementing street-safety enhancement projects such as high-visibility crosswalks, curb extensions, pedestrian refuge islands, protected bike lanes, and public plazas.

To accompany the Guide, we’re organizing a series of "beta city" workshops that will offer hands-on training for government departments looking to implement Tactical Urbanism projects (a Request for Interest is now available for North American cities).

The Guide and workshop series was inspired by some work we conducted alongside Auckland Transport in June 2015. With a 150′ roll of traffic tape lugged all the way from our Brooklyn office and bottle of spray chalk provided by a local advocate, we moved more than 40 AT engineers and planners out of the classroom and into the street to demonstrate how quick and simple change could be. At the completion of the workshop we realized a new guide outlining materials and a hands-on workshop approach could effectively help us transfer the knowledgeand materialsneeded to implement demonstration, pilot and interim use projects.

Thanks to funding from the Knight Foundation and review support from NACTO and the Vision Zero Network, the Guide and workshops will provide information on how to create both short-term demonstration projects (typically led by community groups and lasting 1-7 days) as well as pilot and interim-design projects (often led by city governments and lasting from 30 days to several years). To inform the Guide, we’re pulling together our own best practices from work in cities across the globe, as well as additional knowledge gleaned from a national research survey of the most effective materials and design used by leading cities today.

For both the Guide and workshops, our goal is simple: put more resources in the hands of cities ready to make quick changes, and involve more citizens along the way. In this way, we hope to inspire—and empower—a new generation of citizens, planners and policymakers to become key actors in the transformation of their communities.

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Before and after the Auckland Transport workshop. The bikeway demonstration project allowed participants a chance to become more comfortable with materials and implementation. (Image: Mike Lydon)

Mike Lydon

Mike Lydon is Principal of the Street Plans Collaborative and co-author of Tactical Urbanism: Short-term Actions for Long-term Change (Island Press, 2015).


Tags: bike lanes, tactical urbanism