Anybody out there?

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Here’s a little pebble, I’m giving it a little push downhill. Maybe it will grow a little bigger as it increases with speed. Maybe its impetus won’t be sufficient.

Michelle ma belle Blades, ‘Afterwards’. A song I knew before I heard it..

ah this cunting siftware with little buttonbs that loink you to fuck all wordpress is shite

Park(ing) Day Phoenix - September 18th 2009

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Bella from Frocksonbikes holding court Following on from Jane’s Walk (see below), Friday, September 18th sees the first Phoenix Park(ing) Day, an annual, one-day, global event that promotes the importance of green and urban public spaces.

The concept of PARK(ing) Day is based on the idea that putting money into a parking meter is like ‘renting’ a public space. It is intended to help people rethink the way we use our streets and creates diverse conversations about how we can make sustainable cities.

The Park(ing) ’spaces’ will be created adjacent to ASU Downtown, on 1st St. between Polk St. and Fillmore St. from 7a.m. to 9 a.m.

Please show up to lend your support, or just to absorb with your morning coffee.

For more details on Park(ing) Day in general, visit www.ParkingDay.org, or follow the event itself on Facebook or Yelp.

Walking with Jane

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Saturday May 2 saw Jane’s Walk come to Phoenix. No, this wasn’t a charity fundraiser, but a simple Saturday-morning stroll along a pre-determined route through the heart of downtown Phoenix.

Jane is (was) Jane Jacobs, an American-born Canadian urbanist, writer and activist, best known for The Death and Life of Great American Cities (1961), a powerful critique of the urban renewal policies of the 1950s in the United States that led to the vast unnatural sprawl and isolation that plagues our cities today.

Jane Jacobs Equally well known for her grass-roots organizing and interventions into poorly thought out urban renewal projects that threatened to destroy neighborhoods, her great strength was not simply critiqueing urban sprawl and blinkered urban planning, but offering solutions and proposing radically new principles for rebuilding American cities.

Jane’s Walk is a series of neighbourhood walking tours that helps put people in touch with their environment and with each other, by bridging social and geographic gaps and creating a space for cities to discover themselves. (www.janeswalk.net)

Jane’s Walk Phoenix joined Anchorage, Boston, Cambridge, Dayton (Ohio), Jackson (Mississippi), Moscow (Idaho), New Orleans, New York City, Oakland, Oklahoma City, Omaha, Orlando, Philadelphia, Salt Lake City, San Francisco, Seattle, Spanish Harlem (New York City), Starkville (Mississippi) and St. Louis on the 2009 list. It drew a healthy and mixed crowd. Organizer Yuri Artibise smartly selected a few locations along the way to stop and talk about related issues or the location’s history, which allowed laggers to catch up.

Mainly, though, the issues, histories and anecdotes flowed naturally through the group’s social interaction, as it snaked its way through downtown. This was no ‘tour’ but rather a series of ambulatory conversations intersecting at the point where people and city merge.

Jane's Walk Phoenix 2009 descends on Roosevelt Historic Park Jane’s Walk Phoenix 2009 descends on Roosevelt Historic Park

Differing opinions, different perspectives. Frustrations, experiences, hopes. Personal observations; who used to live here; where the best coffee can be had. It was also a great reminder of how much fun an ad-hoc community can be, and how easily and quickly one can be created.

And having worked in the heart of downtown for 6 years, exploring it freely, it was personally pleasing - and suprising - to find new interesting places. This city continues to reveal itself, repaying
but a minimal investment: a little shoe leather. Thanks, Jane - see you next year!

Pictures:
Jane’s Walk 2009 (all cities)

Jane’s Walk 2009 Phoenix - I

Jane’s Walk 2009 Phoenix - II

Dewey Decimalized

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Gas to drive to Bookmans: $2

Nelson Algren’s 13 Masterpieces of Black Humor: $2

Finding the book filed in the African American section: Priceless

 

Iconic City: Seminal Movie Images of Phoenix #3: The Gauntlet

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As per Laura’s request, here is Clint Eastwood driving an armor-rigged bus through 1970’s downtown Phoenix, as the massed forces of law and order try to blow him to kingdom come, somehow miraculously avoiding gunning each other down in the turkey shoot that follows.

For trainspotters out there, here are a few of the locations we’ve identified:

Parking Garage, NE Corner of Van Buren & 2nd Ave

Parking Garage, NE Corner of Van Buren & 2nd Ave


Central Ave & Monroe, looking west

Central Ave & Monroe, looking west

Central Ave, Luhrs Tower in the background

Central Ave, Luhrs Tower in the background


Monroe between 2nd and 1st Ave, looking east

Monroe between 2nd and 1st Ave, looking east


US Bank, SE corner of 1st Ave & Monroe

US Bank, SE corner of 1st Ave & Monroe

Central Ave & Monroe, looking south, Luhrs Tower in background

Central Ave & Monroe, looking south, Luhrs Tower in background

Washington, looking towards Central

Washington, looking towards Central

Wells Fargo, SE corner of Adams & 2nd Ave

Wells Fargo, SE corner of Adams & 2nd Ave

SE corner of Washington & 9th St, Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in background

SE corner of Washington & 9th St, Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in background

And here is video of the whole sorry thing: