Green Infrastructure in the Time of Social Distancing: Urban Policy and the Tactical Pandemic Urbanism
<p>“Social distancing lawn” by the Galeria EL Art Centre in Elbląg, Poland. Photograph reproduced with permission from author, Łukasz Kotyński.</p> "> Figure 2
<p>Timeline for key events for New Zealand (red) and Poland (blue) COVID-19 Pandemic (February–October 2020), including closures of recreational areas and parks.</p> "> Figure 3
<p>Lockdown and post-lockdown use of Miramar Park and public space in Miramar Wellington (fot. Krzysztof Herman). 1. Message informing about the closure of facilities on the ground of Miramar Central School (including a popular playground and bike track); 2. Dog owners meeting during lockdown (people respecting 2 m “social distancing rule”, dogs not); 3. Messages and games on the pavement in Miramar; 4. “Tactical” use of the park. Cones as goals for a father-son football game; 5. Traces of usage—worn out lawn where regular running occurs (more visible during lockdown; 6. “Tactical” use of a cricket pitch (patches of artificial grass as a picnic area and scooter/bike “track” for little kids.</p> "> Figure 4
<p>Comparison of the number of people and number of social “bubbles” using Miramar Park during lockdown (levels 3 and 4 restrictions) and post-lockdown (level 1, no restrictions). “Weekend” marks headcounts performed during the weekend, “am”—morning (11 am) and “pm”—afternoon (5 pm). All headcounts were carried on during “good-weather” days (temperature between 15 and 25 °C, no rain and none to moderate strength wind).</p> "> Figure 5
<p>Miramar Park. <b>Left</b>: A sports grounds layout for the winter season: 1 April–30 September (football training and match fields for various age groups). Source: Wellington City Council [<a href="#B66-sustainability-13-01632" class="html-bibr">66</a>]. <b>Right</b>: schematic and simplified diagram of pandemic use of the park lawn. Yellow—walking and running path (“track”), blue—social distancing picnic “bubbles’’, orange—asphalt road (bike/scooter track), light green—artificial turf cricket pitches (universal play surface), dark green—large Pohutukawa trees (as an alternative for playground equipment). Photo source: Google Earth.</p> "> Figure 6
<p>The pre-pandemic (<b>left</b>) and the pandemic (<b>right</b>) functional zones of the Polińskiego Park (2020). Source: [<a href="#B49-sustainability-13-01632" class="html-bibr">49</a>] 1—public square, 2—sports field, 3—outdoor gym, 4—children’s’ playground, 5—paddock for dogs. Orange fields—open zones, grey fields—closed zones, solid line—official borders of the park, dashed line—borders of the ‘functional’ area of the park (outside of this line are infrequently used spaces, often occupied by the “undesirables”).</p> "> Figure 7
<p>One of the Instagram photos posted during COVID-19 lockdown in Miramar Park. The description reads: “Lockdown together [heart emoji]. FamiliesAreForever [folded hands emoji].” Source: Instagram website.</p> "> Figure 8
<p>Number of photographs (Instagram posts) of Polińskiego Park (blue) and Miramar Park (red) that present the context of COVID-19 pandemic (March–June 2020).</p> "> Figure 9
<p>Change of number of parks visitors since the beginning of the pandemic (2020). The “Parks” category (as categorised by Google) includes local and national parks, public beaches, marinas, dog parks, plazas, public gardens. Changes relative to a baseline day (the median value from the 5-week period 3 January–6 February 2020). The index is smoothed to the rolling 7-day average. Source: [<a href="#B97-sustainability-13-01632" class="html-bibr">97</a>].</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Health Benefits of Green Infrastructure during Pandemics
1.2. Tactical Urbanism Interventions in Public and Green Space during COVID-19 Pandemic
1.3. The Structure of the Article
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Research Area
2.2. Pandemic Urban Ethnography as a Research Method
- Autoethnography.
- Individual semi-structured interviews with green infrastructure users.
- Non-participant observation.
- Digital ethnography based on social media content.
3. Results
3.1. Functional Changes
3.2. Social Media Monitoring
3.3. Declarative Use of Parks—Conclusions from the Interviews
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Interview Scenario | |
---|---|
PART 1. | Introduction to the interview: self-introduction and clarification of the purpose of the conversation (a scientific study of the use of Miramar/Polińskiego Park; questions about the respondent’s needs or doubts). |
PART 2. | Research questions:
|
PART 3. | Thanks for the conversation and collecting any additional comments. |
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Miramar Park | Polińskiego Park | |
---|---|---|
size | 5.18 ha (4.42 ha open “greens”, tennis courts and preschool area + 0.76 bowling club). Functional, open, accessible area = ~3.9 ha | 5.52 ha (3.9 ha functional area) |
year established | ~1906 * | 1962 |
facilities | Bowling club (building and 3 bowling greens); tennis club (building and 6 courts); preschool with a small garden; large central lawn (team sports field) | Multifunctional sports field (football, basketball, volleyball, tennis); children’s playground; outdoor gym; paddock for dogs; artificial hill; fountain; paved square; monuments; service pavilions (currently not used). |
location | Miramar, eastern suburb of Wellington. Residential area of single-family detached houses. | Grochów (Praga-South), eastern inner-city area of Warsaw. Residential area: mixed, predominantly multi-family housing. |
population (park’s “neighbourhood”) | 3318 (in 2018), area: 104 ha, 31.9 pers/ha population density. | ~20,000 (in 2018), area: 160 ha, 125 pers/ha population density. |
social structure (park’s ‘neighbourhood’) | Mixed, but undergoing rapid gentrification and changing towards domination of creative class. Median property sales price grew 39% over the last 5 years. Median income is slightly lower than in the entire city (34,000 NZD a year as compared to 41,800 NZD for Wellington City). | Mixed, undergoes modest gentrification (visible in physical changes of the built environment as well as in the increase of average real estate prices—below 7000 PLN in 2010, and even 11,000 PLN in 2019 per 1 square meter). Median income lower than in the entire city (belongs to the two lowest quartiles). Gini coefficient for income below 0.44 (average for Warsaw = 0.48). |
Respondent | Date | Gender | Age | Profession | Type of User |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
WAR1 | 25 May 2020 | F | 34 | Corporate employee | Parent |
WAR2 | 26 May 2020 | F | 29 | Corporate employee | Dog owner |
WAR3 | 27 May 2020 | F | 66 | Retired | Senior |
WAR4 | 28 May 2020 | M | 21 | Low-skilled worker (currently unemployed) | Parent (precarious) |
WAR5 | 29 May 2020 | M | 12 (both) | Students | Youth |
WEL1 | 7 August 2020 | F | 37 | Teacher | Parent |
WEL2 | 7 August 2020 | F | 53 | Corporate employee | Dog owner |
WEL3 | 9 December 2020 | F | 70 | Retired | Senior |
WEL4 | 9 December 2020 | M | 71 | Retired | Senior |
WEL5 | 9 December 2020 | M | 13 | Student | Youth |
WEL6 | 9 December 2020 | M | 11 | Student | Youth |
Polińskiego Park | Miramar Park | ||
---|---|---|---|
Pre-Pandemic + Designed | Pandemic + Designed | Pre-pandemic + Designed | Pandemic + Designed |
Benches Children’s playground Local festivals Local political events Outdoor gym Paddock for dogs Running Sports field Strolling | Benches Paddock for dogs Running Strolling | Benches Team sports (football, cricket) Lawn bowling Tennis courts | Benches |
Pre-Pandemic + Non Designed | Pandemic + Non Designed | Pre-Pandemic + Non Designed | Pandemic + Non Designed |
Alcohol drinking Children’s games Family/friends picnics Riding a bike, skateboard or scooter Dog walking Kites/drones flying | Alcohol drinking Children’s games Family/friends picnics Outdoor gym Riding a bike, skateboard or scooter Dog walking Kites/drones flying | Dog walking Family/friends picnics Running Strolling Individual/”bubble” exercise Riding a bike, skateboard or scooter Kites/drones flying Meetings with friends, social interactions | Dog walking Family/”bubble” picnics Individual/”bubble” exercise Running Strolling Riding a bike, skateboard or scooter Climbing trees Kites/drones flying |
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Herman, K.; Drozda, Ł. Green Infrastructure in the Time of Social Distancing: Urban Policy and the Tactical Pandemic Urbanism. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041632
Herman K, Drozda Ł. Green Infrastructure in the Time of Social Distancing: Urban Policy and the Tactical Pandemic Urbanism. Sustainability. 2021; 13(4):1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041632
Chicago/Turabian StyleHerman, Krzysztof, and Łukasz Drozda. 2021. "Green Infrastructure in the Time of Social Distancing: Urban Policy and the Tactical Pandemic Urbanism" Sustainability 13, no. 4: 1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041632
APA StyleHerman, K., & Drozda, Ł. (2021). Green Infrastructure in the Time of Social Distancing: Urban Policy and the Tactical Pandemic Urbanism. Sustainability, 13(4), 1632. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041632