Living Skies & Lifeless Streets

Page 1

Living Skies

& Lifeless Streets

By

PJ Bell

School of Community and Regional Planning University of British Columbia At times, I feel as though I am living a double life. In Vancouver, I walk, ride transit, and cycle rain or shine, scoffing at drivers who are stuck in traffic in their idling, polluting vehicles. I live in one of Kitsilano’s many basement suites and I shop at the local stores just down the street. I enjoy a relatively active and sustainable lifestyle. Unfortunately, each time I return to my hometown of Regina, Saskatchewan, I instantly revert to old habits. The first thing I do is reattach the car keys to my key chain. When I need to run errands, I hop in one of my family’s three vehicles and often drive to a big box store. Even in the summer, cycling is reduced from primary transportation mode to recreational activity. Despite being a SCARP-educated urbanist who should really know better, I am quickly taken over by the suburban, auto-oriented mindset. This mindset—the idea that driving everywhere is simply “the way it works”—is deeply ingrained in the hearts and minds of most Saskatchewan residents. The province is known as the “land of living skies,” which refers not only to the stunning prairie cloud formations, sunrises, and sunsets, but also to the fact that this view is largely unobstructed due to the wide open landscape. Saskatchewanians tend to enjoy wide

1 April 2016 Prepared for PLAN 542 open spaces, and the low-rise, low-density built form that prevails throughout the province reflects this. Unfortunately, this desire for space, combined with the lack of natural barriers to growth, has resulted in classic urban sprawl and automobile dependence. While the skies may be alive, the wide, suburban streets are often lifeless, save for the occasional passing motorist. Throughout my time at SCARP, I have struggled to figure out how the progressive urban theories and principles that I am learning would apply back home in Saskatchewan. Like Canadians as a whole, the majority of Saskatchewanians prefer the suburban lifestyle, and there is significant inertia on the part of developers, politicians, and citizens supporting this type of development. Growing up in Regina, the fancy suburban home was the be-all and end-all of housing types; it is what you aspired to, and in fact, many of my fellow high school graduates—especially those who have never lived outside of Regina—have already begun happily purchasing their own suburban homes. The suburbs, like the private automobiles that enable their existence, are not simply going to vanish, no matter how unsustainable and lifeless they may be. Therefore, it is crucial to find a way to subtly mix more


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