Jane Jacobs talks about how she approached her writing.
May’s Top Posts
Here are my top posts in order of unique page views from May 2011. Overall, I had 1,828 visitors and 7,819 pageviews. Like April, this is a bit down from other months as I have been getting settled in Vancouver and have not able to post as often.
Calvin and Hobbes on City Planning- My Visual Résumé
- Urban Fabric: The Form of Cities
- How to Date an Urban Planner
- 9 Urbanism Fails
- A Brief History of Urbanism in North America: 1800s
- A Brief History of Urbanism in North America: 1700s
- 5 of the Best Urban Infographics
- The Real Jane Jacobs: A Review of APA’s Reconsidering Jane Jacobs
- Finding My Northern Voice
Did you catch-all of these posts the first time around? If not, here’s chance to read what others have found most interesting over the past month.
Is your favorite post in this list? Let me know in the comments section.
What I Talked about at TEDxScottsdale
On April 21st, I had the honor of speaking at TEDxScottsdale.
I have included my speaking notes pertaining below. A video will also be available in the next few weeks.
TEDxScottsdale – Yuri Artibise: Finding My Way Though the Urban Desert
TEDxScottsdale Speaking Notes
My Journey through the Urban Desert
Lost in the Urban Desert
I’m not an architect or an urban planner. Indeed I wasn’t even an urbanist until a few years ago—I didn’t even know there was such a thing.
Until moving to Phoenix, I thought that urbanism was the status quo. Sure I knew that suburbs existed—I even grew up in one—but there had always been a central core to escape to.
Lost in the Urban Desert – II
Upon arriving here, I didn’t have a car; I didn’t even have a driver’s license.
I spent my first months here doing a lot of walking, a lot of transit, and a lot of cycling.
In doing so I got a crash course in how cities worked, or rather didn’t work.
I also began to discover oases in this urban desert. Isolated and small to be sure, but it was a start.
- There were places like the Downtown Phoenix farmers market and local coffee shops;
- There were events like First Friday Art Walks and networking groups like Radiate Phoenix;
- There were advocacy organizations like Downtown Voices Coalition and Local First Arizona;
- There is an extensive network of over 200 neighborhood organizations in Phoenix alone.
Encouraged by these discoveries:
- I began attending meetings and events.
- I started volunteering my time and energy with a few groups.
- I started attending City Hall Hearings
Before I knew it, I was finding my way through the urban desert.
But something was still missing.
Finding My Way
About this time, social media was really taking off. Blogging had gained critical mass, Facebook was gaining steam and Twitter had just been launched.
I began poking around these sites and finding like minds both in Phoenix and around the world.
I started visited blogs to see how urbanists in other cities were using the power of social media to build community in their own neighborhoods.
Through Twitter and Facebook I learned of even more community events and groups in Phoenix.
Encouraged by these further discoveries, I decided it was time to stop feeling sorry for myself.
It was time to start creating the type of community I wanted to be part of.
Yurbanism
My first step was my blog, which started as a way to curate and discuss what I was finding through my research as well as what I was observing online.
I also started writing for other online magazines and websites. This allowed me to meet even more people doing cool and interesting things around town.
As a result, I started getting asked to attend and organize with other events. I even was asked to speak at a few of them!
The urban oases were multiplying.
Soon, attending events and writing about what was going on wasn’t enough. Something was still missing.
I wanted to give back in a tangible way.
I wanted to create my own community in the urban desert.
Jane’s Walk I
As part of my research for my blog, I came across an event called Jane’s Walk.
The walks are held in memory of Jane Jacobs.
Jane was an activist and author who championed the interests and knowledge of local residents over a centralized approach to city building.
She passed away in 2006, but her legacy lives on.
I had long been a fan of her writing, and her book, The Death and Life of Great American Cities
, was one of the books I turned to when trying to find my way.
I also had the privilege of meeting Jane during a couple of her book tours before she passed away.
Jane’s Walk II
Jane’s Walks are a series of free walking tours held on the first weekend of May each year.
They celebrates the ideas and legacy of urbanist Jane Jacobs by getting people out exploring their neighbourhoods and meeting their neighbours.
Jane’s Walks are led by local residents—people like you and me—who want to celebrate their neighborhoods and talk about what matters to them in the places they live and work.
These neighborhood-walking tours started in Toronto in 2007 and quickly expanded to cities around the world; but it hadn’t reached Phoenix yet.
I decided that bringing a Jane’s Walk to Phoenix would be a perfect opportunity to not only honor one of my heroes, but also to begin creating a community in Phoenix.
Jane’s Walk III
Little did I know that I would get so much more out of it.
Through hosting Jane’s Walks in 2009 and 2010 and organizing several more this year, I’ve learned that people want and need opportunities to get to not only know the places they live and work, but also to meet and interact with their fellow residents.
Through the simple act of walking together, we begin to learn about each other’s lives and their connections the neighborhood.
It is through such conversations that shared understanding and a sense of belonging are nurtured and a sense of places is created.
Ultimately these conversations become the stories that are part of a strong and resourceful community.
Park(ing) Day I
Soon after the success of the first Jane’s Walk in 2009, I learned about another annual event—Park(ing) Day.
Park(ing) Day held in September each year.
Here, residents pay for a metered parking spot, but instead of parking our car on it, they create a park.
By temporarily transforming a parking spot into a PARK(ing) space we are attempting to expand our public space and improving the livability of our cities—at least until the meter runs out.
It’s a way to remind ourselves—and our fellow residents who walk by—how important it is to have some space to sit, relax and connect.
But most importantly, it is an opportunity to create community, engage the public and begin a dialogue.
Best yet it is practically free. For the cost of what many of us already have on our patio, we can create community.
Park(ing) Day II
But unlike with Jane’s Walk, I had a lot harder time making it happen.
Perhaps it was the rogue (although perfectly legal) element of it, but—unlike Jane’s Walk—I couldn’t convince any of my friends to help
I had all but given up until about two weeks from the event; I received a message from somebody in Phoenix asking if I was still interested in doing something.
I told her my story and my difficulties.
Her response was basically So What? Lets just do it, and even if it is just the two of us, it will be something to build on.
And it was!
Park(ing) Day III
While Park(ing) Day hasn’t had the public resonance of Jane’s Walk. It has been on of the most meaningful events I have been involved in here.
Perhaps it’s the roguish act of playing Frisbee on the side of a street, or sitting in a lounge chair where a SUV usually parks, but Park(ing) Day has created deeper friendships that I could have ever imagined.
I have met some of my closest and dearest friends though this event. And not only are they great friends, they are also amongst the most active in their neighborhood and in many cases have gone on to hold their own community events.
Together, we have helped create a passionate, active urban tribe in downtown Phoenix.
This puts the truth to the adage that “the harder the effort, the greater the reward.”
It also confirms that even a small handful of people can have a big impact—even if it isn’t that one you had originally envisioned.
Best yet it is practically free. For the cost of what many of us already have on your patio, you too can help create community.
After holding these two annual events, I knew I was on to something. However, two events a year wasn’t enough for me to build the type of community I was looking for. I needed something more regular.
Hence Places, Spaces and Faces.
Places, Spaces & Faces I
We rarely get this opportunity to get together with people who aren’t on our usual roster of friends and family.
It’s rare to share our time, much less our home-cooked food with a stranger we’ve just met
Yet, this is what happens at the Places, Spaces and Faces Community Dinner each month.
It started just over a year ago and has been held on the third Saturday of every month.
Sometimes there’s a speaker and a topic of discussion.
Other times it’s simply an opportunity to get together and share food and stories in a special place.
Places, Spaces & Faces II
PSF is not an exclusive club. It’s open to the public. There are no membership or admission fees, other than a potluck dish.
Rather, it’s a way to get together with our fellow residents and share some things with them: our time, our food, our stories, and most importantly, ourselves.
There is no ulterior motive to this gathering. They are NOT for business networking, nor fund-raising, nor meeting dates, although any or all of these things happen there on occasion. J
The purpose of it is purely to come together as a community.
To be with—and talk to—one another.
Places, Spaces & Faces III
I can’t take credit for creating this event—that goes to my friend and fellow urbanist, Taz Loomans.
But PSF is something that I’ve felt was special since the beginning. It highlights another aspect of creating community in the urban desert.
This simple premise of getting together with interesting people in interesting places has proven to be a powerful formula for all sorts of friendships, ideas, and connections.
There’s something meaningful about sitting down over a meal. It forms a unique bond between people.
Perhaps more importantly it forms these bonds in special places, tying us no only closer to each other, but the neighborhoods in which we live, furthering our sense of place.
What I’ve Learned
Through these events, and numerous others that I’ve created, assisted or simply attended in Phoenix, I’ve not only been able to find my way through this urban desert we call home.
In the process, I’ve learned a lot about urbanism, sustainability—and most importantly—community.
- I’ve learned that we are all responsible for the success of the places we live.
- I’ve learned that we can’t have a good city, sustainable neighborhoods, vibrant places to live, play and work if we don’t have a strong sense of community.
- But most importantly—in the spirit of TED—I’ve learned my ‘Idea Worth Spreading.’
Cities are People
That idea is “Cities ARE people.”
Community events like the ones I’ve mentioned help forge people together and instill in them the idea that WE are the city.
If we feel that we are separate from our city, we will continue to be ‘victims’ of all the things that aren’t working, instead of becoming a part of the solution.
We need to stop waiting for someone else start the initiatives that we want to see.
If we truly desire urban sustainability, we need to become “co-creators” of the type of cities we want to live in.
By retaking control of our communities and making our own changes—no matter how small—we can be the leading edge of a sustainable urbanism.
Soon, the few oases we have in this urban desert, will not only multiply, but also begin to weave with each other into a vibrant city.
Many of the things I’ve talked about are a mindset change, and cost nothing other than time.
The major investment is a shift in thinking from the prevailing YO-YO ethic (“you’re on your own”) to a WITT mindset (“we’re in this together”).
Once we consider ourselves a community, and stewards of not only one another’s well being, but also the well being of our city, anything is possible.
My Wish
Alas, like all good things in life, they come to an end. I will be leaving Phoenix next week to return to Canada–Vancouver to be exact.
Since I’ve announced that I’d be leaving Phoenix, I’ve had several people tell me that there will be a big hole in the community without me.
While I an honored—and humbled‑ by this, I’m also a little bit frustrated. One of my main goals in Phoenix has been to empower others to act.
If TED is about Ideas it is also about Wishes. It is my TED wish, or more accurately my TEDx wish that each one of you take a small step to build your community.
Remember, it doesn’t need to take much money, or even time to create community, even in the urban desert.
It can be as small as simply getting to know the person sitting beside you tonight, attending a neighborhood meeting, or participating in this year’s Jane’s Walk, Park(ing) Day or the next Place’s Spaces and Faces.
Many of you will find that this first step will encourage participation in others and, perhaps even starting your own.
If you all take this small step, soon any hole that may be felt by my departure will turn in to a mountain of community.
This will make Phoenix a better place and my time here will have been worth it.
THANK YOU
March’s Top Posts
Here are my top posts in order of unique page views from March 2011. Overall, I had 3,277 visitors and 11,122 pageviews.
Did you catch-all of these posts the first time around? If not, here’s chance to read what others have found most interesting over the past month.
9 Urbanism Fails- Apps for Urbanists
- Phoenix’s CityScape Fails to Live Up to the Hype
- A Brief History of Urbanism in North America 1900-1909
- Best of Yurbanism: Placemaking
- ABCs of Urbanism eBook
- Urban Fabric: The Form of Cities
- 5 of the Best Urban Infographics
- Walk this Way: Jane’s Walk Phoenix is profiled in Sunset
- Friday 5: TED Talks for Urbanists
Is your favorite post in this list? Let me know in the comments section.
April’s Top Posts
Here are my top posts in order of unique page views from April 2011. Overall, I had 1,869 visitors and 8,857 pageviews. This was a bit down from other months as I was preparing to move to Vancouver and was not able to post as often.
- Urban Fabric: The Form of Cities
- A Brief History of Urbanism in North America: 1930-1939
- 9 Urbanism Fails
- Small and Cool in Phoenix?
- 11 Blogs for Urbanists
- CityScape: Suburbanizing Downtown Phoenix
- How I stack up on the ‘BBC’ Reading List
- Farewell Phoenix
- Revealing Phoenix’s History, Layer by Layer
- Urban Connectivity Leads to Urban Vitality
Did you catch-all of these posts the first time around? If not, here’s chance to read what others have found most interesting over the past month.
Is your favorite post in this list? Let me know in the comments section.
February’s Top Posts
What a month. Thanks to an unexplained (but definitely welcome) surge in views for the Los Angeles at Twilight video and—more recently—the mention of my Urban Infographics post by Allison Arieff at GOOD.is, the site shattered all sorts of records this month.
But before we get into the stats, here are my most read posts in order of unique page views from February 2010:
February’s Top 10
- Los Angeles at Twilight [Weekend Watch]
- Walk this Way: Jane’s Walk Phoenix is profiled in Sunset
- 5 of the Best Urban Infographics
- A Brief History of Urbanism in North America: 1700s
- 10 Urban Visionaries Who Aren’t Jane Jacobs
- A Brief History of Urbanism in North America: 1600s
- Resume
- I Connect the Dots
- Urban Fabric: The Form of Cities
- Enabling Urban Encounters
Did you catch-all of these posts the first time around? If not, check them out now!
Site Stats
Visitors
Overall, I had 4,023 visitors and 20,203 page views, almost doubling last month’s record of 10,488! This means that even though I owe most of my visits to two posts, readers stuck around and checked out several others, a great sign
Browsers/OS
For the platform and browser geeks out there, here are some interesting stats on the platform and browsers my visitors use:
- Internet Explorer / Windows: 22.20%
- Firefox / Windows: 20.28%
- Chrome / Windows: 14.71%
- Safari / Macintosh: 13.35%
- Firefox / Macintosh: 10.65%
- Chrome / Macintosh: 6.19%
- Mozilla Compatible Agent / iPhone: 3.41%
- Safari / Android: 1.72%
- Mozilla Compatible Agent / iPad: 1.57%
- Linux: 1.64%
- Safari / iPhone: 1.39%
- Other: 2.89%
Summary by Platform
- Windows: 57.2%
- Mac: 30.2%
- iPhone/iPod/iPad: 7.1%
- Android: 1.7%
- Linux: 1.6%
- Other: 2.2%
January’s Top Posts
Here are my top posts in order of unique page views from January 2011.
Did you catch-all of these posts the first time around? If not, here is your chance to read what others have found most interesting over the past month.
- 11 Blogs for Urbanists
- ABCs of Urbanism eBook
- Urban Design in 10 Easy Steps
- Phoenix’s Midcentury Marvels Create a Sense of Place
- 7 Opportunities to Get Involved with the City of Phoenix
- 11 Things NOT To Do in 2011
- More Alphabets for Urbanists
- Resume
- The Magic is in the Mix: Rethinking Mixed-Use Urbanism
- Sustainable Housing: Being Green is NOT Enough
Is your favorite post in this list? Let me know in the comments section.
Site Stats
Visitors
Overall, I had 1,864 visitors and broke 10,000 pageviews for the first time, with 10,488. This is 60% above December and due, in part, to an average of 5.63 pageviews per visit. This means that my readers stick around and read other posts and pages—a good thing for a blogger!
Traffic Source
- Google (organic search): 30%
- Twitter: 25%
- Direct: 12%
- RSS feed (Feedburner): 10%
- Google Referral: 6%
- Facebook: 5%
- All Other Sources: 5%
- UrbanismNews.com: 3%
- Other Backlinks: 2%
- Paper.li: 2%
Visitor Locations
I had visitors from 68 countries in January, with the most coming from the US. This is not surprising given that this is a US based blog (for now at least). What is, however, is the comparatively few visitors came from Arizona. While AZ topped the list, there were only 341 visitors from the state (18% of all visitors). California was second with 162 and New York was third with 89. In all I had visitors from 44 states. I would love to hit all 50; I guess I should write a post or two on places in Nevada and Arkansas, among others
.
After the US came Canada, with 161 visitors. The UK, Spain and France round out the top five of the 68 countries represented by my visitors. This long tail of readers is interesting. I had at least one visitor from countries as varied as Syria, Ukraine, Nepal, and New Caledonia. The fact that somebody siting in Damascus is reading what I write is pretty cool.
11 Blogs for Urbanists
These 11 blogs will help you keep on top of news and views about various aspects of urbanism and city life in 2011.
-
Planetizen.com: An urban planning news website, featuring articles, op-eds, jobs, courses and information for the urban planning, design and development. (@Planetizen)
- PriceTags: Gordon Price is a former Vancouver city councillor and the Director of the City Program at Simon Fraser University. His blog gives readers an insider’s perspective of urban issues. While it with a focus on Vancouver, he cover topics of interest to anybody interested in urbanism.
- Urbanophile: Aaron M. Renn’s blog focusing on helping America’s cities thrive and find success in the 21st century. He offers unique perspectives and innovative strategies for cities and their residents. (@Urbanophile)
- Rebuilding Place in the Urban Space: Richard Layman blog on placemaking, historic preservation and urban design. His emphasis in on Washington, DC but his posts contain useful “lessons for all cities.
- All About Cities: This blog by Wendy Waters explores the economy, society, communities, people, businesses, organizations, infrastructure, civil society and government of cities—and the tensions and connections between them. I have a natural affinity for Wendy and her writing as she has lived in both Arizona and British Columbia ☺(@Wendy_Waters)
- CEO for Cities: A civic laboratory of today’s urban leaders catalyzing a movement to advance the next generation of great American cities. Posts by Carol Colletta (@CColetta) and Julia Klaiber (@JuliaKlaiber).
- Creative Class Exchange: Richard Florida and his Creative Class team write about urbanism, economic competitiveness, demographic trends, and cultural and technological innovation. (@Richard_Florida)
- Walkable DFW: The ‘thought laboratory’ of Patrick Kennedy, a professional urban planner and designer based in Dallas. The blog explores how bionomics relate to self-organizing, emergent urbanism. (@WalkableDFW)
- PSFK: “The go-to source for new ideas for creative business.” While urbanism isn’t this blogs major focus, it regularly touches on several issues related to cities. (@PSFK)
- Next American City: A national magazine created for and by a new generation of urban thinkers and leaders. Their Buzz blog features constantly good content on all aspects of urbanism. (@NextAmCity)
- The City Fix: A global blog and social network devoted to news, advocacy and “best practice” solutions for sustainable cities around the world. (@TheCityFix)
Do you read any of these blogs? What do you think?
Did I miss one of your favorites? Let me know.
December’s Top Posts
Here are my top posts in order of unique page views from December 2010.
Did you catch-all of these posts the first time around? If not, here is your chance to read what others have found most interesting over the past month.
- 10 Great Gift Ideas for Urbanists
- Blog (Main Page)
- Urban Design in 10 Easy Steps
- Yuppie Urbanism: Biting the Hands that Serve Us
- 25 NIMBY Spinoffs
- How I Stack Up on the BBC Reading List
- Putting the ‘Urban’ in Urban Gardening
- Zipcar Urbanism: Bridging a Gap in the Urban Fabric
- Resume
After a record-setting November, overall visits were down slightly in December 2010. This is due, in part, to the fact that I took a mini-hiatus from posting new content over the holidays. On the upside, those of you who did visit stayed longer and checked out more pages than usual; page views were a near record 6,556, almost double that of November.
Is your favorite post in this list? Let me know in the comments section.
Now I Know My ABCs (of Urbanism): A Recap
In September—inspired, in part, by Jason King‘s post, [Fill in the Blank] Urbanism—I began my own explorations of various ’urbanisms’ used in contemporary urban studies.
13 weeks and 26 posts later, the series is over. Over the past three months I have taken a peek at a range of urban theories and phenomena, ranging from the fanciful to the rudimentary. In writing this series, I’ve learned a lot more about some popular urbanisms (new urbanism, landscape urbanism); been able to focus on some of my favorites (adaptive urbanism and open-source urbanism); and perhaps even coined a new urbanism or two (yuppie urbanism and Zipcar urbanism).
Here is a recap of the topics I’ve covered:
Writing this series has also taught me that these 26 urbanisms cover but a small fraction of the diversity of urban constructs that exist. On Thursday I will post a list of 101 urbanisms that will highlight the broad scope of contemporary urban studies.
In the meantime, I would love to know which of my ABC’s you found most interesting or compelling. Please leave me a comment highlighting your favorite post.
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About Yuri
Through his Yurbanism brand, Yuri Artibise explores the ‘Y’ of urbanism by sharing ways to make our cities more livable, community-oriented places one block at a time.










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