The Oasis of Peace? Social Perception of Urban Parks from the City-Dwellers’ Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What do urban parks mean for city dwellers? How are they connected with their place identity and what functions do they attribute to parks?
- How should urban parks look in order to fulfill the expectations of city dwellers? What are the essential features of a good park?
- What social conflicts emerge from the expectations of different groups of park visitors?
1.1. The Importance of City Parks for Sustainability in Big Cities
1.2. The Quality of City Parks: What People Prefer and How They Use It
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Context
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Analysis
- “Meaning of parks” refers to the personal meaning attributed to the public parks by the respondents. The crucial feature of this meaning is its personal nature; here, the respondents refer to what the parks mean to them and how they form a part of their place identity.
- “Functions of the parks” refers to the functions that the respondents attribute to the parks to describe their importance for the city as a social ecosystem. The “Functions” are similar to the “Meanings”, but differ in that they refer to what the respondents believe the make the parks important, rather than to being part of the respondents’ place identity.
- “Preferred features” refers to the characteristics of a “good park” from the respondents’ perspective. The “Features” are derived from both “Functions” and “Meanings”; they refer to how the respondents believe the public parks should look.
- “Conflicts” refers to the situations where the respondents’ “Meaning” and “Functions” of public parks are endangered by social practices perceived as disturbing. It refers to what the city parks need to avoid in order to fulfil their meaning and functions, as interpreted by the respondents.
- “Remedy” refers to all the practices reported by the respondents intended to help the city parks to better fulfill their meaning and functions.
2.4. Ethical Consideration
3. Results
3.1. Personal Meanings and Perceived Functions of the City Parks
“Really like an oasis of calm and peace and well being, simply for the person”.
“If I want to meet my friends somewhere, we don’t want to meet on the street, so a park is simply the best place for me. At the same time, I will spend time with people (…) with whom we do events based on electronic music, and since last year I have noticed that the trend is slowly spreading here, that more and more things are happening, and for me personally, I think…. It will attract young people”.
“It seems to me that the overall greenery in the city (…), or the amount of greenery, determines the character of the city, as it were. Like when there is a huge city and there is, I don’t know, one small park or a couple of smaller parks, but otherwise there is nowhere (…), as if there is no other greenery that you can see. For example, simply by looking at it from some heights in the city, you don’t really feel as good there (…) as you would in a city where there are simply trees or some greenery at every step”.
3.2. Conflicts over the Parks
“It is a disadvantage when dog owners sometimes go there with their dogs. They use, for example, Wilson Forest, which (…) I live close to. Unfortunately, there are some huge dogs that the owners don’t pick up after, which makes me uncomfortable, I admit. I would (…), I don’t know how to prevent it, because when you approach them and say they should pick it up, they are rude or laugh at me”.
“(…) the homeless (are probably not bad, but I don’t know where they sleep in the summer, as they don’t like the asylums, where they could spend time too. Otherwise, they’d be in those parks and somewhere in those garden colonies and somewhere like (…). But I don’t think the homeless are dangerous. Rather, they are unhappy”.
“(…) that place in front of Janáček Theatre has become a place in Brno where people meet not only in the summer or in the heat, but also in the winter, though of course much less then. As soon as it starts to get a little warmer, they simply meet there (…) in the afternoon and especially in the evening and night—Brno teenagers from the age of fifteen and (…). It’s just a horror and they drink a lot of alcohol there, because of course they can’t get that alcohol anywhere else, so they go there and there’s a huge space—you have something to sit on and it’s quite comfortable there”.
“You said that the teenagers just sit there like that (…). Maybe the question is (…) whether you are just bothered by their presence, or if they leave trash and things like that, if they are loud, or if something specific bothers you, because in the same way that it is a park for you, it is a park for them too. You cannot just exclude them a priori”.
“On the contrary, I have the impression that if there were more police officers, I know that it is like a question of some liberality of the Czech Republic that I can have a beer in the park, although it is against the law. But if there were more cops, I think I’d be fine with it. Although I understand the meaning of the law, I myself have 1 or 2 beers in the park and then go away without leaving a mess there”.(C6, male, 26 years, graduated, employed)
3.3. Preferred Features—How the Parks should Look
“(…) It’s also nice there (…). On the one hand, there’s a big meadow; if you want, you can relax there in the sun. Then further on, there are actually benches under the trees, so you can sit in the shade under a tree, if you don’t want to sit in the sun on the lawn or meadow. In winter, it is great for children to go sledding. So I think that makes it quite multi-functional as well. At the same time, there are two children’s playgrounds, repaired ones”.
“What I like about Lužánky Park is that (…) it seems to be separate from city and rush; that there is, for example, (…) a place for dogs, where they can run freely. Then there is another part where there is a barbeque grill, or parts where people can just sit on the lawn and relax. Then there is a part for dog lovers, which I like”.(D2, female, 26 years, graduate, employed)
“What I like about Wilson’s Forest is that it’s at least a little bit wild, whereas most of the other parks are so extremely maintained. On the one hand, it is good that you can lie down there on the grass, of course, on a blanket, but if, for example, a part of the park was allowed to grow a little wilder, it would of course benefit the biodivirsity and the whole thing. It would also work better in cleaning the air and so on, because you not only need trees but, of course, grasses and bushes, which are not always allowed to grow freely there”.
“Inventing how and where to make the wilderness would be nice, but not maintaining most of these parks (…), I don’t know. Maybe with the Janáček Theatre Park it would probably not be nice”.
“I would like to say that it is wonderful there, that there are a lot of big trees, and that it is really cool there. We went there recently and it was very noticeable. They are actually the same as the big roads around, and if you cross only as if from the shade, then it is like there is a fire there. There it’s like really awful to know when it, like what are those big trees doing, that (…) that’s amazing. I like that grass is grown there, so it’s like the land is not so dry”.
3.4. Remedy: What the Visitors Do to Protect Their Parks
“(…) We repeatedly called and wrote requests to repair the swings and playground. Absolutely (…) nothing was happening. One dad then temporarily solved the problem in a very improvised way. Then they removed the whole swing, so there was nothing there for 2 months. Then they ceremoniously installed a new one, which (…) seems like a long time to me”.(G6, female, 27 years, graduate, maternity leave)
“Every time I go to the park, I yell at someone who leaves dog poop there (laughs). I don’t think that just (…), I give them bags and instruct them, or I just take it away, because it bothers me that the kids touch it”.
4. Discussion
4.1. Urban Parks as (Socially Controlled) Nature
4.2. Urban Parks as a Cultural Battleground
4.3. Good Prospects
4.4. Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Focus Group | Respondents | Female | Male | Mean Age | SD |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 9 | 7 | 2 | 43 | 12, 19 |
2 | 7 | 6 | 1 | 38, 42 | 16, 95 |
3 | 7 | 4 | 3 | 44, 57 | 19, 83 |
4 | 9 | 7 | 2 | 43, 55 | 15, 97 |
5 | 8 | 7 | 1 | 43, 62 | 19, 82 |
6 | 8 | 5 | 3 | 44, 25 | 19, 66 |
Total | 48 | 36 | 12 | 42, 97 | 16, 60 |
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Binka, B.; Čech, M.; Činčera, J. The Oasis of Peace? Social Perception of Urban Parks from the City-Dwellers’ Perspectives. Sustainability 2022, 14, 11460. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811460
Binka B, Čech M, Činčera J. The Oasis of Peace? Social Perception of Urban Parks from the City-Dwellers’ Perspectives. Sustainability. 2022; 14(18):11460. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811460
Chicago/Turabian StyleBinka, Bohuslav, Martin Čech, and Jan Činčera. 2022. "The Oasis of Peace? Social Perception of Urban Parks from the City-Dwellers’ Perspectives" Sustainability 14, no. 18: 11460. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811460
APA StyleBinka, B., Čech, M., & Činčera, J. (2022). The Oasis of Peace? Social Perception of Urban Parks from the City-Dwellers’ Perspectives. Sustainability, 14(18), 11460. https://doi.org/10.3390/su141811460