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De Blasio Sets Broad Goals for ‘Quality of Life’ in State of the City

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  • Susan Chin
    Posted January 11, 2019 at 3:55 pm

    ‘Quality of life’ has become a contested term, just like the public spaces we share in our city—transit, streetscape, plazas, parks, POPS, etc. These places are where real issues of equity and access play out. The Mayor’s SOTC focused on important issues of healthcare, retirement, paid leave and bad landlords, however, the City of New York misses the opportunity to adequately address our transportation crisis, homelessness, mental health, and public housing.

    In August 2017, Design Trust for Public Space, Neighborhood Plaza Program at The Horticultural Society of New York, and Uptown Grand Central/NHEMA witnessed how these critical issues collide at 125th Street Plaza under the Metro North rail in Harlem. Our cross sector workshop, with the support of the Loeb Fellowship alumni, convened 50 stakeholders of plaza partners, Business Improvement Districts and local businesses, public agencies, developers, and homeless support organizations to envision better plazas from different user experiences and perspectives, hence better ‘quality of life’ for the community.

    The value of plazas and public space as places of exchange and opportunities for stakeholders and policy makers to collaborate on critical challenges, i.e., homeless and mental health, became self-evident at that workshop. This year we’ll further explore equitable and sustainable ways to support these public plazas citywide, and make them public for all.

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