Making Space: A New Way for Community Engagement in the Urban Planning Process
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Community Background
1.2. Project History
2. Literature Review
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Focus Group Rationale
3.2. Coordination with Neighborhood
3.3. Focus Groups
- What brought you to Oxon Run? How long have you been here? What keeps you here? How long do you imagine or think you will be here?
- What are you proud of about Oxon Run? What do you think is good about Oxon Run? How would you change it?
- How do/did you use this space? How have you seen others use this space? In a perfect world, how do you see this space being used? [And do you know that the trail is not a roadway?]
- Right now, the waterway has a concrete-lined channel in much of the local park. Do you know about plans to naturalize the waterway (or make it more natural)? What do you think or how do you feel about that?
3.4. Data Analysis
- Access covered how people with various accessibility abilities engage with the space, the availability of restrooms, and the hours the park is open;
- Environment included dumping, aspects of nature, and playgrounds and trails;
- Safety covered harmful activities, security cameras, emergency phones, lighting, and police presence;
- Use focused broadly on activities and users including children, families, education, fitness, sports, and special events;
- Vision included amenities, community connections, employment, and regular maintenance;
- Other Parks highlighted other DC parks including Anacostia Park, Haynes Point, Meridian Hill, and Rock Creek Park;
- Waterway Naturalization covered the concrete slabs currently in parts of the stream in the Park as well as extensive long-range plans for stream bed restoration.
4. Results
4.1. General Themes
“I’ve been living over here for 27 years, I’m a native Washingtonian. I had some concerns about Oxon Run because part of the Oxon Run is down by my end. We don’t have as much as they have down there on the Mississippi Avenue side. So that’s why I’m here to be more active when I can.”~ Community Member
“I probably need to go visit that area so I can visualize it. Cause, I’m gonna be honest I didn’t see that part of the park. Like I said, the park is big.”~ Returning Citizen
4.2. Primary Themes
4.2.1. Vision
“When Park amenities start coming in, especially the folks on the border, they start coming over here. They’re gonna run us out because they wanna move us this way and that way, because other people...Then the house that becomes for sale, somebody from somewhere else moves into the neighborhood. And all of a sudden before, you know, it looks like Georgetown, and so that’s the kind of flow you gotta kind of manage.”~ Community Member
“…[I want to] introduce our teens today to volleyball and badminton like when we were young. I don’t, I don’t see many of our children playing volleyball, badminton. I don’t see them playing, they’re too many handguns.”~ Returning Citizen
“It is like a gray space, but I feel like if the park was more colorful, and it had more activities…”~ Youth
“If we were to engage people with people that look like them doing things that they could possibly aspire to do, so it could be like soccer in the park with somebody who I’m sure cares about engaging young people, majority of which are young people of color about sports outside of just the sports that are the popular ones, which is baseball, basketball, and football.”~ Youth
4.2.2. Use
“I almost teared up a little bit when he was talking about everybody getting in the park and being together because that’s, that’s the dream. Right. I use the park, mostly, for long runs with my dog. I see a lot of other folks who, who use it for the exact same thing. I run into folks who are walking their dogs. A lot of times we’ll stop we’ll chat, we’ll, you know, talk about what’s going on with our dogs and comment on the weather and all that jazz. And, and then we’ll move along.”~ Community Member
“I see it being used for families. So, you don’t have to go so far out to have a little picnic. The children [can] enjoy their self, just play till they tired. Even if they can put a little carousel in it, you know, something, just a space for children and just go and enjoy the carousel and maybe a little train, to go through the whole Oxon Run. Cause it’s a big park.”~ Returning Citizen
“Other people, they seem to enjoy the parks more. I like when you see like people you ride pass, like they seem like they’re enjoying themselves or they’re with their kids or something. Like, I think mostly it’s for kids, like a playground is for kids, but younger people can also there too.”~ Youth
“We want to enjoy the park, too, and maybe we can make a space for the ATV bikes.”~ Community Member
“There aren’t any roads in the park. It’s not for driving.”~ Community Member
“I visited the park more when I attend school (Hart Middle School). We played some games there.”~ Youth
“I use to go to the park with my dad, not so much anymore.”~ Youth
4.2.3. Safety
“I think the more people we, we get in the park…the more, I think the more people will feel safe because there’s a little bit of sense of, you know, if there are enough people in the park, then you know, it, it’s harder for like one person or a few people to, to, to be bad actors.”~ Community Member
“I agree with the cameras, because if we’re out in public, you shouldn’t be doing anything that shouldn’t be, you know, that can’t be seen on camera. So, cameras would be awesome. That would definitely tame the community, without making them uncomfortable with police least just kind of hanging around.”~ Returning Citizen
“If they know it’s safe and at night it, it’s light up. And then like to say it’s closed at a certain time, that’ll be, that’ll be a strong, new, good light, good lighting...All good lighting for the cameras. Yeah. Just make it safe. Safety. Safety is first.”~ Returning Citizen
“Unless I haven’t seen it. I would definitely like an emergency phone, something so that I wouldn’t have to run all the way to the street. Like if I’m in the middle of the park and something happens and I don’t have service, I think we should be able to notify, MPD or fire or EMS that they can get to us in a timely fashion.”~ Youth
4.2.4. Environment
“So I’ve heard about the stream bed restoration plan. That what it was, I mean, it’s like a decade in the making, you know. There’s starting to be some movement on it. I think Brenda shared recently that you you’re looking around for contractors now, to begin work on it. I’m not a hundred percent sure. So, I’d love to see more like public information that’s like on a website or something like that, or in a news report so that that folks in the community can understand what might be about to be happening to the park.”~ Community Member
“Um, it can be sad to look down into the, the stream bed and see these like huge concrete slabs that have been, you know, lifted up and shifted due to, you know, however many winters of the ice, just lifting them up and then getting carried away by, you know, whatever storm. I’m excited to, to see it, uh, restored a little bit to, what it used to be. And hopefully, obviously it can accommodate, you know, storm and, and whatever, you know, the practical needs of a waterway in the middle of a city. But, um, I’m excited to see it be restored a little bit to its natural beauty.”~ Community Member
“My science teacher was great. They took us out, we studied the different types of animals that were in the actual stream and all the little smaller things.”~ Youth
“So I just enjoyed it. It made me open up more and it just opened me up. We need to keep our environment clean and safe for the birds, the trees and the people. Some people can go and enjoy it, and help keep it clean.”~ Returning Citizen
4.3. Other Themes
“I just don’t feel comfortable walking that tiny little trail that’s in a circle by myself if there’s nobody else around. I think that is one of the things that I struggle with.”~ Community Member
“This is a huge park and we’re not just doing things where the amphitheater is. People down at the other end near first and Atlantic have complained that we’re not doing anything down there. So we’re starting to activate that part of the park as well. So my thing is the territorialism.”~ Community Member
“Like we used to, like back in the day we used to go to Haynes Point, Rock Creek Park, and Anacostia Park have nice times, cookouts, picnic. We just wanna bring it back, live entertainment, skating, you’d be there all day.”~ Returning Citizen
“You’re talking about, uh, fishing. I love fishing and I want…I haven’t been fishing at Rock Creek Park yet. So yeah, I actually wanna go there.”~ Youth
“And I feel like I had the privilege of [walking] out of my house and not being fearful of whether or not something was going to happen to me. If I go use my park, which was Sherman Circle, which was like two blocks away from me. So I could leave, go use that park, walk, go to another circle for a while. When I bought my house in ward eight, I did not use this park and I didn’t do a lot of walking because I was fearful for my own safety.”~ Youth
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Appendix B
- INTRODUCTION
- SCRIPT
- 1.
- What brought you to Oxon Run? How long have you been here? What keeps you here? How long do you imagine or think you’ll be here?
- 2.
- What are you proud of about Oxon Run? What do you think is good about Oxon Run? How would you change it?
- 3.
- How do/did you use this space? How have you seen others use this space? In a perfect world, how do you see this space being used? [and do you know that the trail is not a roadway?]
- 4.
- Right now, the waterway has a concrete-lined channel in much of the local park. Do you know about plans to naturalize the waterway (or make it more natural)? What do you think or how do you feel about that?
- CLOSING
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Gearin, E.; Hurt, C.S. Making Space: A New Way for Community Engagement in the Urban Planning Process. Sustainability 2024, 16, 2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16052039
Gearin E, Hurt CS. Making Space: A New Way for Community Engagement in the Urban Planning Process. Sustainability. 2024; 16(5):2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16052039
Chicago/Turabian StyleGearin, Elizabeth, and Carletta S. Hurt. 2024. "Making Space: A New Way for Community Engagement in the Urban Planning Process" Sustainability 16, no. 5: 2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16052039
APA StyleGearin, E., & Hurt, C. S. (2024). Making Space: A New Way for Community Engagement in the Urban Planning Process. Sustainability, 16(5), 2039. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16052039