As a former Miami resident, I used to complain on a daily basis about the limited public spaces throughout the city. Most spaces either catered to consumptive opportunities, like bar patios, malls, and theaters, or to recreational purposes only, like basketball and tennis courts, or pools, but simple hang out spots that were also aesthetically pleasing or plain cool (besides our beach) were rare.
In the last five years, the city has experienced a rapid turn around and we can partially thank the Miami Foundation for that. The foundation, which offers a multitude of grant programs, has established a Public Spaces Challenge to invite programming and design ideas from local citizens on how to revitalize public space in the city and increase genuine participation in planning efforts. Following its infamous area code ("305"), the competition offers a total of $305,000 yearly and selects a number of projects, ranging from events and ongoing programs to physical installations.
The platform itself is innovative. On the design competition's web page, members of the public can pin their concepts on a map of the city to specify its location and add a small blurb (along with images and detailed descriptions) of how this idea might improve the city. Comments are allowed as well to help facilitate conversation around the idea during the selection process and encourage collaboration among diverse members of the public.
Some innovative ideas from this year's challenge:
Visit the Miami Foundation Public Spaces Challenge website here
In the last five years, the city has experienced a rapid turn around and we can partially thank the Miami Foundation for that. The foundation, which offers a multitude of grant programs, has established a Public Spaces Challenge to invite programming and design ideas from local citizens on how to revitalize public space in the city and increase genuine participation in planning efforts. Following its infamous area code ("305"), the competition offers a total of $305,000 yearly and selects a number of projects, ranging from events and ongoing programs to physical installations.
The platform itself is innovative. On the design competition's web page, members of the public can pin their concepts on a map of the city to specify its location and add a small blurb (along with images and detailed descriptions) of how this idea might improve the city. Comments are allowed as well to help facilitate conversation around the idea during the selection process and encourage collaboration among diverse members of the public.
Some innovative ideas from this year's challenge:
- Containers in Community/ Brickell Exercise Box: this neighborhood scale installation takes old materials to create 'mini parks' on parking spots. It borrow ideas from urbanism concepts such as shipping container construction and parklets, but the innovative approach lies in its desire to draw Miamians outside to exercise and continue their traditional indoor gymming habits. The project is recreational in nature but solves a number of urbanism issues including public health, slow streets, and reuse of building materials from the nearby port.
- Roots Collective Black Marketplace: this project is self-proclaimed to promote small business development in Little Haiti, a predominantly black working class neighborhood in North Miami, through a monthly meeting that encourages networking through ideas sharing to bridge the equity gap and empower the local community across cultural boundaries. The concept tackles a fundamental issue related to immobility and missed economic opportunity of residents in a low-income black community. In addition, local art, dance, and music are leveraged to preserve unity despite rapid redevelopment in the surrounding area.
Participants pin their ideas to the map. Image Source: OurMiami Miami Public Spaces Challenge
Visit the Miami Foundation Public Spaces Challenge website here
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