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Urbanarium

Public Washrooms

Public Washrooms Part I: 

What do public washroom facilities look like in just, green and thoughtful cities? How do they work? 

Access to public washrooms is a basic need. Yet, they haven't received the attention they deserve in our communities. Municipalities across Canada, including Vancouver, are developing washroom strategies and plans. In this session we envisioned what we can do in the future but also addressed the massive health impacts in communities such as the DTES right now.

Redesign Public Space!

Re-tooling = transforming the function of existing systems to fill new value-adding roles in supporting thriving, equitable futures 

Re-visioning = transforming our ideas of what a thriving, equitable future can be by re-imagining how it looks, feels and functions.

Regenerating = transforming our potential - as individuals, teams and communities - to collaboratively create and nurture thriving, equitable futures through seven generations.

Which public places, spaces or buildings need Redesign! ...which do you already Love!

Shelter From The Storm

Design Interventions for Public Spaces was a special Studio session to showcase this new program to our Board of Directors, Advisors and collaborators.

The challenge: As cities adapt to the next wave of Covid-19 and colder weather, what urban design interventions are needed for our public spaces like washrooms, food service, sheltering infrastructure and open markets? 

The Connected City

If we want to make the world a more inclusive place, we’ll need to redesign and reshape the places we live to build connections. ⁠The Connected City Spring Break Camp aimed to explore the networks that connect us all.

In Studio 1: Mapping Experiences we asked: How do you travel around the city? How do you feel when you’re traveling? What do you hear? How does transportation affect your sense of connection?

City Debate #15: RETHINK THE DTES PLAN

The Downtown Eastside Plan (2014) was created to protect low-income residents and other community members by restricting new development and uses not specifically targeting the poor. Many believe the DTES is Vancouver's last authentic and compassionate neighbourhood in the city; others see a neighbourhood in decline. Is it time to rethink the DTES Plan to allow for a greater mix of self-supporting uses, residents and businesses? Or, does the DTES Plan effectively protect a vulnerable population and preserve/work towards a cohesive neighbourhood?

Links to the Plan:

City Debate #14: ELECT REGIONAL REPRESENTATIVES (VIDEO)

Metro Vancouver, a federation of 21 municipalities, one Electoral Area and one Treaty First Nation, relies on consensus decision-making by nominated councillors to direct its planning and activities. The urgent issues of our times—climate change, Land Rights, housing, transportation/transit—require decisive regional action. Would an empowered regional government, directly elected by the region, be more effective and accountable?  

City Debate #13: COMMERCIALIZE THE SEAWALL (VIDEO)

First established as a loop around Stanley Park in 1980, the extended Seawall now stretches 28 kilometers. Despite its heavy usage, it is served by few commercial activities. Is the Seawall a beloved public realm success story or boring strip of pavement for single-use recreation? Should the Seawall continue to resist any further “revitalization”, or should more commercial activities be encouraged to foster a greater variety of activities?