REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM MLA DESIGN PROJECT DELANEY HOPEN "We acknowledge that we are here on Kalapuya Ilihi – the traditional Indigenous homeland of Kalapuya peoples, who were dispossessed of their Indigenous homeland by the U.S. Government and White settlers over several years, but most notably in Treaties between 1851 and 1855. Kalapuya people were forcibly removed to what are now the Grand Ronde and Siletz reservations, and are now members of Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon and the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians, and continue to make important contributions in their communities, at UO, and across the land we now refer to as Oregon. We share this information out of humility and respect for this Indigenous homeland, and for the Indigenous peoples who continue to live and thrive in what is now called the State of Oregon." I would like to acknowledge that my site selection is located on the traditional land of the first people of Seattle, the Duwamish people past and present and honor with gratitude the land itself and the Duwamish Tribe. It is on the shared waters of the Coast Salish People of Western Washington, most specifically the Duwamish and Suquamish. I first wanted to start off with a land acknowledgment identifying that we were visitors on the stolen land of the Kalapuya people, Grace’s presentation was amazing and I hope everybody got the chance to see it. I also wanted to take a moment to acknowledge that the site that I’m choosing to work on is located on the traditional land of the people the Duwamish and Suquamish people. This land is connected by shared waters of the coast Salish people. I also wanted to share a program the tribe is running called Real rent Duwamish where you can choose to dedicate $54 a month symbolizing the 54,000 acres of homeland that the Duwamish Tribe signed over to settlers in 1855. 4 PROJECT STATEMENT I N LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE HAS PLAYED A ROLE IN T HOW WE DESIGN FOR DENSE URBAN ENVIRONMENTS R FOR THOUSANDS OF YEARS. CREATING PUBLIC O SPACE FOR SOCIAL COHESION, AND OPEN SPACE FOR PUBLIC EXPRESSION IS A VITAL COMPONENT OF THE URBAN FABRIC THAT IS THREATENED DUE TO ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL CHANGES PROVOKED BY MODERN LIFESTYLES. SPORTS HAVE BEEN A TRADITIONAL INVESTMENT BY GOVERNMENT LEADERSHIP FOR THEIR ABILITY TO PROMOTE COMMUNITY CONNECTIVITY, AND BETTER THE HEALTH OF THE POPULATION. REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM, TAKES INSPIRATION I FROM EUROPEAN MODELS OF URBAN REGENERATION N USING THE ATHLETE TO DRIVE ECONOMIC T R DEVELOPMENT. NOW MORE THAN EVER, PROTECTING O OPEN SPACE, AND FORCING SPORTS IN THE FACE OF THE URBAN USER MUST BE A HIGHLIGHTED OPPORTUNITY OF URBAN DESIGN, TO ENSURE QUALITY OF LIFE WHILE FIGHTING THE CLIMATE CRISIS AND IMPROVE AMERICAN HEALTH. 5 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM I N T R O INTRODUCTION To understand how this project developed, it’s My cohort was prompted in our 2nd year of our important to highlight the collision of a few main factors master’s by instructor Rob Ribe to begin collecting regarding Urban Design and Sports history before I define research topics we liked. I chose three main pieces and one my project. Sports are a product of leisure time, and although case study: an article about the psychological benefits of they have been a training activity or folk ritual, sport itself viewing blooming poppies that elderly folks experienced has been an exercised right for those that can afford to play in China, the long-game that sports arenas and stadiums in America. The rise of sport is linear to the rise in urbanism play in brown field remediation, World Health Organization in the U.S. due to consistent working hours, and assembled data on obesity and heart disease, and the CopenHill Ski church/employer teams to help build comradery in new Slope and 24-hour Waste Incinerator by Bjarke Ingles. To way of life in the city. Businessmen in the 1970’s-80’s me these topics were all so logically connected. saw the energy sport brings to people and communities, I wanted to use Landscape Architecture’s ability I and the development of sports medicine displayed a to promote green social space to better city health, help N T huge opportunity for commodification. Participatory joy clean-up some of our human mess, and make people move R O is overshadowed by privilege and spectatorship today, together because it’s good for them. and money did that. Urban designers now hold a greater That summer of 2022 I studied Urban Design in responsibility during the climate crisis to build resiliency in Barcelona with my project advisor Ignacio López Busón, our public infrastructure and place making that can help. and Architect Philip Speranza, and learned about the power of urban design and planning. Barcelona has a long history 6 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA INTRODUCTION of systems thinking, with the design of the grid by Ildefons cannot be translated directly to the U.S. for so many Cerdà in the 19th century, and proposed Superblock model obvious reasons, but there were similarities that I felt with by Salvador Rueda in 1987. Barcelona Superblocks are a my volleyball community. I went on a run during my last design goal that revolves around taking back the street week in the city, and finally found some stairs to do some from the privately owned vehicle and making the street sprinting. An older woman stopped me and was speaking public space. The city has struggled with overcrowding and in Catalan about how horrible my posture was, I blame the environmental degradation with severe heat waves and air studio hours on a stool and computer. She was so kind and pollution thanks to climate change and tourism in the area. warm, and told me she had been a runner for 30 years. Sport This model of cutting off streets grew businesses community is everywhere and knows no language. This because of pedestrian travel, decreased noise pollution in interaction only reiterated why I wanted to start thinking some areas by 4 decibels, has decreased private vehicle about this project. use by 92%, and continues to provide more habitat for local After this I started to break down design goals and species through ecologically diversifying street planters understanding my process as the athlete; stairs to cross and trees. Superblocks make public space when there is terrain and topography were a sporting instrument we no room for it, a unique compaction and density issue of would use in college that required no money for training. Barcelona, but if we were to apply this to the United States One of the most important sparks for design occurred while what would this look like? walking along the diagonal. If you hang out long enough, This city’s vibrant community is something that you will find local runners running towards the transit in their path. Why? We design these transit areas with grass 7 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM I N T R O INTRODUCTION lawn underneath, a tactic to help indicate a vehicular line I’ve been able to witness all the positive biproducts that (ironically, so we stay out of the way of the tracks), to help long term sport participation has had on my family for potentially collect runoff and feed it back into the aquifer as generations, the communities and resilience it provides it runs off adjacent hardscapes, and then plant large canopy throughout all cultures and people, and the longevity of trees on the edges so waiting for transit can be more health for the individual. pleasant, and while keeping that understory lawn alive. This In the same way I grew up watching my dad go to is what an urban planner sees. pick up basketball games after work at our local gym and The athlete sees: I can run in the shade so I won’t overheat watching my grandparents golf with their best friends from or get sunburnt, the air will be a little cooler from the trees high school every weekend for 30 years, I began to consider underneath, and now my knees won’t hurt because I can just how tight athletic bonds are and they began with place. run on shallow flat lawn, I’ll just hop out the way once I see I owe so much of my own experience to my family, and the I the train coming. culture they provided that valued sport. I played because N T Not genius just logical, athletes are efficient. my family did, and it was always in my face, so what if R O sport was in the urban user’s face for participation, not for spectatorship? It’s a very different conceptual model than Living in Barcelona for 3-months prompted the American Sport industry with the media that exists on conceptual thinking about how the ground user in a city our devices, we must let streets be our stadiums arenas brings energy as a pedestrian. Throughout my life as a courts and fields. collegiate athlete and growing up so intertwined in sport, 8 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA INTRODUCTION Sport and exercise help in relieving anxiety, felt like home in Seattle. depression, lowering risk of heart disease and obesity, Richard Louv touched on the impacts of our improves problem solving skills, makes you work as a lack of freedom to explore the outdoors is having on our team, embraces competition, improves focus abilities for American kids. Focusing struggles begin at the age of 3, individuals with ADHD, assists in building individual self- with medications for ADHD being prescribed as early confidence, strength building, practices communication as pre-school. Li Qing touched just how much of our skills between teammates, builds leadership... shall I go on? animal is still left in us, and that when all our senses are While spending the summer alone on foot walking only experiencing greys and hardscapes of the urban around Barcelona, Dubrovnik, London, and Oslo, I explored environment our instincts that crave color fruit on a tree, different literature including Richard Louv’s Last Child in the or flowers, psychologically is no wonder we are struggling. Woods, and a portion of Li Qing’s Forest Bathing: How Trees We are at cross-roads where our urban environment must Can Help You Find Health and Happiness in the collection be more than the urban environment, but a park, an urban Nature is a Human Right edited by Ellen Miles, and ironically forest, and a playground, and I think a sport facility. Reading felt anxiety begin to renter my body as a pedestrian by the about these topics helped me gain awareness as I moved time I was walking to Big Ben from my hostel, after every throughout these cities. When I got back to the U.S., where walk previously felt like a hike in Dubrovnik outside the I drive my Ford Truck everywhere and we work more than old city. Safe to say, Barcelona taught me a big lesson we live, I began assembling my project Regenerative Sport about dense urban design that London could benefit from, Urbanism. Dubrovnik’s rocky terrain is just a different model, and Oslo 9 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM I N T R O INTRODUCTION Regenerative Sport Urbanism is the runner on the train lines, Hoopfest in Spokane that brings in 42 billion dollars every June, my brothers making a game of foursquare out of the square slabs of driveway pavers at our family home that eventually recruited more friends, the set of stairs I’ve ran by the beach since I was 15, the gym where I met my mentor Amoreena Miller a proud and successful woman in Architecture in Seattle. I don’t view this project as a 22-month temporary exploration, or a box to check for a master’s degree but rather a long-term work that revolves around the positive influence urban design and planning I could impose on human health in cities if we as designers N T saw the potential that everyone at this University sees for R O Sports Marketing and that flashy Swoosh symbol. This is Draft 1.0 10 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA INTRODUCTION 11 01 RESEARCH This phase is composed of urban design research at the global scale. This section seeks to understand the differences between the way European cities have approached design public space, and sports to promote public health. In turn, this impacts cultural opinions and familiarity with specific sports relating to climate and geographic location (i.e. distance from water bodies, mountains, fields, etc.). This research paints an overall picture of how cities have controlled public relationship with urban exercise facilities. 02 FRAMEWORK Phase two zooms in to city scale, applies the research and understanding of various major cities by selecting outliers through statistical analysis. Successful European cities that have created sports culture, have a tradition of valuing certain sports, or excel in urban design can are identified and used as baseline measurements. These baselines are then compared to one major city in each of the lower 50 states in America. Statistical analysis then feeds into spatial analysis. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) are then used to understand how the physical organization of the city plays into or against this statistical analysis. This creates a dual-supported narrative of how each city is scored and ranked in comparison to one another aimed directly towards public health and exercise. 03 DESIGN The last phase is now provided with specific problems, locations of pressure points within the city system, as well as areas of opportunity. Design application considers the uniqueness of the city, and builds into existing culture and infrastructure, while it's main driver is accessible sports, exercise, and community cohesion in the landscape. A METHODOLOGY 12 01 02 A 03 METHODOLOGY 13 WHO DESIGNS FOR WHO PLANS FOR SPORT? SPORT? 14 15 MADDEN PARK CHICAGO IL, 1906 HISTORY 16 WHO DESIGNS FOR SPORT? To understand the history of sport it helps to understand how we got here to the US and our $39 billion industry that it currently is. Sport as a folk activity, traditional ritual, and/or strength and endurance training as some sort of game has been embedded into every culture, but the industry really started to grow into our modern day beast with the rise of urbanism. This linear trend of people moving to cities to have consistent working hours allowed for more flexibility and leisure time more time for self-care more time to have fun after studying the history of sport for the public user the city of Chicago is an incredibly prominent example of what I would view as the weaponization of sport. During World War One there was an influx of people moving out of the South and into the cities North like Chicago. It became rapidly overcrowded and there wasn’t enough quality public space or quality living space for people who weren’t white or wealthy. One of the best part of sport is the flexibility that openness carries for the athlete and now a pick up game can begin with the bare minimum. IDA B WELL HOUSING PROJECT PLAYGROUND HTTP://WWW.LOC.GOV/ MADDEN PARK CHICAGO IL, 1906 HISTORY 18 "These sporting landscapes of hope could be a conduit for racial advancement and interracial cooperation, but they could just as easily become stark reminders of the various ways the North perpetuated and even exacerbated the racial inequalities that migrants had hoped to escape, hindering their full integration into and enjoyment of modern urban environments." -Brian McCammack, Landscapes for Sport Sports in Chicago played a major role in finding identity in the landscape for the black community during a time of extreme separation and redlining let’s seasonally it would get a little golden Chicago so now the environment played a role in providing a space for identity and the unequal access per conditions in existing field houses only permitted to use by white wealthy residents stressed and the lack of equity in a system that was strategically starving people of their right to gather. The tie people have to place was not only in poor condition, but would also be strategically stripped away by the impacts of seasonality. This systemic racism and access issue in planning our American cities is just as present today as it was in the 20th century. America decided to sport in the 1970s only stressed in a rationale that the people that can’t afford to play sport together deserve to and that if you can’t you better be better than everybody else physically and performing as such. That’s the only way you’ll get quality access to a space. "The physical environment (i.e. nature 1906 and it's built forms) has been key to sport activities, which have been motivated by politics, recreation, amusement, and pleasure, camaraderie, and concerns for physical and mental health. Landscapes have been shaped and environments have been used for physical exercise and sport in all parts of the world at all times." -Sonja Dümpelmann, Landscapes for Sport IDA B WELL HOUSING PROJECT PLAYGROUND HTTP://WWW.LOC.GOV/ HTTPS://WWW.FLICKR.COM/PHOTOS/VAVEL/8193687088 1992 2022 1975 1700 600 CE 1850 HTTPS://WWW.FORBES.COM/SITES/MIKEDOJC/2020/07/13/USGA-GOLF-MUSEUM-ACQUIRES-TREASURE- HTTPS://EN.WIKIPEDIA.ORG/WIKI/CHUNKEY#/MEDIA/FILE:CATLIN_TCHUNG-KEE,_A_MANDAN_GAME_ TROVE-OF-VINTAGE-GOLF-PHOTOGRAPHY/?SH=6983AF4636D7 PLAYED_WITH_A_RING_AND_POLE_01.JPG HTTPS://WWW.NPS.GOVH/PTLTAPCSE:/S//W0W00W/W.FLHIYC-KDRID.C-OAMRM/PYH-LOIFTEO-SIM/VPARVOEVL/E8-I1N93-T6H8E7-0L8A8TE-1800S.HTM 1885 "70% of kids stop playing sports by the age of 13." -National Alliance of Youth Sports, 2021 70% of American kids stop playing sports in Middle school. This is a huge number that is really heart breaking to me, but I can honestly say I can see the impacts of this in my work coaching in the community. I think in a lot of ways we’ve made it this way and it’s only getting worse because life is getting expensive the literature only scratches the surface of the reality of the situation that’s really messy and complicated financially. + So from this my project regenerative support urbanism was born from the intersection of landscape architecture and the designers impact on placemaking the urban planners responsibility to create equitable opportunity and shared environments and my own lifelong love of sport and the impact I’ve watched it have on the lives of the individual. REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM HOW CAN A METHODOLOGY BE APPLIED WHEN DESIGNING FOR URBAN SPORT OPPORTUNITIES? 26 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA GOALS • FIND LOCATION POTENTIALS IN A SPECIFIC SYSTEM • BRING PEOPLE TO THE STREETS TO HELP LOCAL BUSINESS • PROMOTE PERSONAL MOVEMENT • ENCOURAGE AND PROVIDE SPACE FOR GROUP ACTIVITY 27 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM Highlights the importance of vacancy and underutilized urban space for Temporary Urbanism various activities, events, and installations allowing for experimentation and adaptation. Everyday Urbanism Ordinary, daily activities of urban residents, which focuses on the needs of those activities in design. Tactical Urbanism Focused on grassroots and community-led initiatives that aim to improve urban spaces through low-cost, temporary interventions. Messy Urbanism Challenges the idea of neatness of orderly planning by embracing complexity. Inviting local communities into shaping urban environments, highlighting Bottom-Up Placemaking the importance of inclusive participation, collaboration, empowerment of residents in determining character and identity of their neighborhoods and public spaces. URBANISM 28THEORY DELANEY HOPEN - MLA REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM Planning and designing with the thought of using public space for play, and considers how the system can support communal sport-placemaking and encourage outdoor exercise. URBANISM THEORY 29 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM HTTPS://WWW.URBANDEMOGRAPHICS.ORG/POST/FIGURES-MAP-LAYERS-R/ 30 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA GIS: Geographic Information Systems The isolation of information and data tied directly to a location which can then be overlayed to understand the greater picture of the system. Commonly used via ArcGIS, and QGIS softwares. GIS analysis helps expose patterns in the landscape, sometimes but not always, as visible to human perspective-view. WHY GIS? 31 Income BARCELONA GIS LAYERS Sports Facilities Through GIS analysis, we were able to filter different areas of life in the city of Barcelona. Income, Sports facilities including schools, NDVI Vegetation, Parks and green open space, and popular running paths tracked by runners using NDVI the app Strava. This data can help Vegetation filter areas that have a lot of sports activities currently, and those that don't pertaining to socioeconomic issues, space availability, and the impacts of low green space in an urban setting. Parks BCN Strava Running 32FRAMEWORK Income Sports Facilities NDVI Vegetation Parks BCN Strava Running FRAMEWORK NATIONAL SCALE 01 1. SET SCALE 2. SET BOUNDARY 3. SIFT YOUR DATA 4. SUMMARIZE 5. ZOOM 02 CITY SCALE 1. SET SCALE 2. SET BOUNDARY 3. SIFT YOUR DATA 4. SUMMARIZE 5. ZOOM DISTRICT SCALE 1. SET SCALE 2. SET BOUNDARY 3. SIFT YOUR DATA 4. SUMMARIZE 5. ZOOM NEIGHBORHOOD SCALE 1. SET SCALE 2. SET BOUNDARY 3. SIFT YOUR DATA 4. SUMMARIZE A METHOD5. DESOIGN LOGY 02 So what you’re seeing is a rough project map that follows the same repetitive process of four 03 rounds of filtered data analysis at every single scale. 04 NEIGHBORHOOD SCALE 1. SET SCALE 2. SET BOUNDARY 3. SIFT YOUR DATA 4. SUMMARIZE A METHOD5. DESOIGN LOGY 35 01 02 36A METHODOLOGY DATA TO LOOK FOR 1. ENVIRONMENT 02 2. ECONOMICS The simplicity that was actually not that simple 3. DEMOGRAPHICS 4. HEALTH at all was that the same cycle of information was 5. INFRASTRUCTURE sought out at every single scale and it just looks a little different at each scale the environment, the 03 economics, the demographics, the local health, and the infrastructure all contribute to access to quality sport and exercise space in an urban environment. 04 A METHODOLOGY REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM RESEARCH PHASE 00: SPORTS AND URBANISM 38 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA RESEARCH So to kick off the so-called simple and logical task I needed to get to know the beast I was working with I began researching a vast amount of topics pertaining to sports design urbanism landscape architecture and economics in January of 2022. These were some of the literature and data samples that were the most influential of my readings that I used in this process if you’re interested in the intersection of sport and landscape I could not recommend more Sonja Dumplemann’s landscape for sport book she edited it’s so fun and it’s so informative about just how much place for exercise connects to our society as it progresses. this topic is a rabbit hole so I could go on and on about it, but the most direction I received as far as design goals and guidelines I received from Daniel Casas Valle an urban design researcher and planner from Portugal that actually provided some public sport space design details that I will get into later, and stressed that sport space is always implemented as an architectural left over. 39 RESEARCH RESEARCH CASE STUDY HOOPFEST, SPOKANE WA Part of my research included looking at if this process of using public sporting to generate community energy and local business revenue is happening and this is just one example I looked at a lot of different precedents and it kind of made me glaze over the fact that this one is in our backyard and I’ve been to it. Highly recommend even just walking through visiting it’s very fun there’s a lot of little mini events and pop ups. But, in 1990 a group of 5 went around to local businesses making up three blocks of downtown Spokane to get them to sign off on a petition to host a three day basketball tournament they agreed with the hope of getting more business and shut down the traffic of the streets in June. CASE STUDY "HOOPFEST WEEKEND BRINGS IN ABOUT A 47-MILLION-DOLLAR IMPACT TO THE INLAND NORTHWEST EVERY SINGLE JUNE SINCE 1990." -Spokanehoopfest.net HTTPS://WWW.FACEBOOK.COM/MYKCRAWFORDPHOTOGRAPHY Today who hoopfest generates about 47 million to the entire inland northwest not just Spokane and has 6,000 TEAMS 3,000 VOLUNTEERS expanded to 45 city blocks this seasonal influx and 225,000 FANS reputation paired with Gonzaga’s basketball success 425 COURTS has helped shape the riverfront development in 45 CITY BLOCKS Spokane and create a new reputation for the city. REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM SCALE 01 ANALYSIS SCALE 01: THE NATIONAL SCALE 46 SCALE 01 ANALYSIS Now that I feel grounded in possibility I needed to start analyzing how it could apply all of this research on an American sport context into a digestible methodology 47 SPORTS ECONOMICS ENVIRONMENT DEMOGRAPHICS $ TOWARDS SCHOOLS AIR POLLUTION PPM POPULATION $ GPU WALKSCORE/BIKESCORE DENSITY DAYS OF SUN 48 DEMOGRAPHICS INFRASTRUCTURE HEALTH POPULATION FACILITIES OBESITY DENSITY PARKSCORE HEART DISEASE 49 I have been advised by multiple people to let you know up front that I don’t expect you to understand any of this because that was kind of my job but my process began for example by trying to look at every major city across the United States and how some factors included census data like obesity how many people die from heart disease every year air pollution walkability park score, etc. This data sifting took a few months and a lot of conceptual thinking as well visualization attempts in tableau and excel I wanted the data to be relevant so I what I did, in the shortest summary ever of a couple months of my life was evenly rank them compared to one another to start seeing how those categories that are adding up compare Los Angeles to West Virginia for example. Some factors included census data, NOAA and EPA. FINDINGS 46. CHARLESTON, WV 1. NEW YORK, NY 47. LOUISVILLE, KY 2. BOSTON, MA 48. OKLAHOMA CITY, OK 3. LOS ANGELES, CA 49. BIRMINGHAM, AL 4. HONOLULU, HI 50. JACKSON, MS 5. WASHINGTON D.C. LOW HIGH FINDINGS As mentioned previously in my project the analysis uses these categories to begin organizing what areas could impact healthy living at the national level, so heres what I found: The south deeply struggles with issue of health pertaining to all of these categories, not saying they don’t hold impactful sport culture or communities, but there is significant work to be done in many of their sectors, most notably obesity and heart disease. Some of the best scores are so great, if you can afford to live there!! FPINNDWINGS 6. SEATTLE, WA 7. PORTLAND, OR 36. BOISE, ID LOW HIGH FPINNDWINGS So what does this mean? How does this matter? Well, if I’m building a methodology that can be applied anywhere, I have to take my data and start applying it to my skills. This degree has provided me with important environmental analysis and design skills in our climate, so I want to look into the best of the Pacific Northwest to make this process a little easier since I am driving this train. Seattle and Portland ranked one after the other, but for a lot of reasons including density, population, and the newer surge of people moving to Boise it fell a bit shorter. TAKEAWAYS • Majority of 'successful' cities in the ranking were observed on the coastlines of the U.S. • American city density could really improve • Our city models are challenged an incomparable to a lot of European counter parts due to population sizes • I hate excel but love Tableau Softwares used: Excel, Tableau, QGIS Summary Steps: 1. Research and understand how geography pertains to infrastructure and health in the U.S. 2. Determine what data and factors contribute to health and sport activity 3. Rank the data points correlating to each city (with the largest population) in each state relative to one another, and see what kind of economic culture that city carries 4. Consider how this data could influence larger investment of public infrastructure and resources 56 57 ANALYSIS SCALE02: THE CITY SCALE 58 ANALYSIS 59 SEATTLE ANALYSIS SPORTS ECONOMICS ENVIRONMENT DEMOGRAPHICS MEDIAN HOME COST PARKS POPULATION PRIVATE SPORTS WETLANDS DENSITY RIPARIAN ZONES RACE HAZARDS EDUCATION LEVEL INDUSTRIAL AREAS PRIMARY LANGUAGE VEGETATION AGE 60 SEATTLE ANALYSIS SPORTS DEMOGRAPHICS INFRASTRUCTURE HEALTH POPULATION FACILITIES OBESITY DENSITY PUBLIC SCHOOLS HEART DISEASE RACE PRIVATE SCHOOLS EDUCATION LEVEL STREETS PRIMARY LANGUAGE TRAILS AGE ZONING 61 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM SEATTLE ANALYSIS 62 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA SEATTLE ANALYSIS I set up my analysis the same way following my project structure, this data was now going to be a little more NORTHGATE LAKE CITY dissectible and was a bit more familiar to me due to NORTHWEST the Barcelona program. These 22 indicators within my categories were some of my target data sets I sought NORTHEAST BALLARD out. GREEN LAKE (FREMONT) UNIVERSITY Overall this added up to about 70 shapefiles, Seattle’s MAGNOLIA DISTRICT opendata is luckily pretty good. QUEEN INTERBAY ANNE So if you haven’t done any sort of process like this or CAPITOL CASCADE HILL used GIS you kind of need to find a basket. If I am looking (SLU) at 70 shapefiles, and each shapefiles has hundreds of DOWNTOWN CENTRAL AREA thousands of data, like apples and oranges, I needed to find a way to put those apples and those oranges GREATER into specific baskets. Massive organizer is I apparently. DUWAMISH WEST SEATTLE SEWARD PARK Districts are helpful, within a city they carry different BEACON HILL DELRIDGE culture and landscape types in this larger urban RAINIER VALLEY system. Seattle has 20 identified districts, which some names are a bit different to locals. 63 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM SEATTLE ANALYSIS Parks Environmental Transit Stops Infrastructure Race Demographics Residential Hazards & Zoning 64 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA SEATTLE ANALYSIS Parks Riparian Wildlife Vegetative Cover Transit Stops Public Parking Bike Lanes Streets Race Economic Standing Health Equity Design Equity Residential Industrial Flood Risk Earthquake Risk 65 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM PROCESS WORK 66 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA PROCESS WORK 1. -1 GREATER DUWAMISH 0 NORTHWEST +1 QUEEN ANNE -1 DELRIDGE 0 BALLARD +1 CAP HILL -1 RAINIER VALLEY 0 CASCADE +1 NORTH CENTRAL -1 BEACON HILL 0 INTERBAY +1 MAGNOLIA -1 NORTHGATE 0 CENTRAL AREA +1 NORTHEAST -1 U DISTRICT 0 WEST SEATTLE This is another example of some layers I don’t expect -1 LAKE CITY 0 SEWARD PARK -1 DOWNTOWN Demographics you do understand, but to display my process. 2. +2 NORTHEAST -1 RAINIER VALLEY So, by hand I determined what some of my most -1 NORTHGATE +1 QUEEN ANNE -1 U DISTRICT 0 WEST SEATTLE +1 CAP HILL -1 LAKE CITY influential data is to the user, and being able to sport. 0 SEWARD PARK +1 NORTH CENTRAL -1 CASCADE 0 BEACON HILL +1 MAGNOLIA -1 INTERBAY 0 DELRIDGE Facilities and there American tie to recreation play a +1 NORTHWEST +1 BALLARD -2 GREATER DUWAMISH Environment +1 CENTRAL AREA -2 DOWNTOWN huge role, the parks we are given to do so, and how much leisure time we have to take care of ourselves 3. +2 NORTHEAST -1 RAINIER VALLEY +2 QUEEN ANNE -1 NORTHGATE aka socioeconomic standing. +2 CAP HILL -1 LAKE CITY +2 MAGNOLIA 0 BALLARD -1 INTERBAY 0 WEST SEATTLE At this level I wanted to apply a touch of personal +1 NORTH CENTRAL 0 SEWARD PARK -2 U DISTRICT +1 NORTHWEST -2 CASCADE knowledge just from life and growing up playing +1 CENTRAL AREA +1 BEACON HILL -3 GREATER DUWAMISH Parks +1 DELRIDGE -3 DOWNTOWN in facilities; you can’t trust a local school to want to support your sport play if it isn’t tied to their school, -1 BALLARD 4. +3 MAGNOLIA -1 RAINIER VALLEY renting space is super high, and they cater a lot of kids -1 NORTHGATE +2 NORTHEAST +2 QUEEN ANNE 0 CENTRAL AREA so my filtering and as a landscape designer I really -2 INTERBAY +2 CAP HILL 0 WEST SEATTLE -2 U DISTRICT +2 NORTHWEST 0 SEWARD PARK wanted to select heavily on parks and open space and +2 DELRIDGE 0 LAKE CITY -3 CASCADE -3 GREATER DUWAMISH +1 NORTH CENTRAL how they can be protected and saved for communities Habitat +1 BEACON HILL -4 DOWNTOWN that don’t have them. One last consideration was: I +4 MAGNOLIA -1 BALLARD want sport to be an escape for people, and for a lot of 5. -1 RAINIER VALLEY +3 CAP HILL -1 NORTHGATE +3 NORTHEAST kids, that 70% that quit playing, school may not be the -2 U DISTRICT 0 WEST SEATTLE +2 QUEEN ANNE 0 SEWARD PARK escape for them. +2 DELRIDGE -3 INTERBAY 0 LAKE CITY +2 NORTH CENTRAL -4 CASCADE +1 NORTHWEST -4 GREATER DUWAMISH Facilities +1 BEACON HILL +1 CENTRAL AREA -5 DOWNTOWN 67 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM PROCESS WORK Wildlife Corridors Vegetative NDVI Green Space Overlay Parks 68 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA PROCESS WORK Social Equity Health Equity City of Seattle Design Equity index focus areas Economic Equity 69 OVERLAY PROCESS The Racial and Social Equity index combines information on race, ethnicity, and related demographics with data on socioeconomic and health disadvantages to identify where priority populations make up relatively large proportions of neighborhood residents City of Seattle Design Equity Data by the Department of Neighborhoods 70 71 +4MAGNOLIAQUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 3.6 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 1,180,000 USD (+7.8%) Known Parks: Discovery Park, formerly U.S. Army's Fort Lawton, Kiwanis Memorial Park, Magnolia Tidelands Park, etc. Schools: 3 public, 2 private +3CAPITOL HILLQUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 3.8 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 762,500 USD (+3.7%) Known Parks: Washington Park and Arboretum, Volunteer Park, Madison Park, Cal Anderson Park, etc. Schools: 5 public, 8 private +3NORTHEASTQUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 6.8 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 1,030,000 USD (+8.4%) 72 Known Parks: Magnuson Park, Burke Gilman Trail, etc. Schools: 9 public, 7 private MAGNOLIA HIGHEST QUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 3.6 mi2 SCORING Avg Home Selling Price: 1,180,000 USD (+7.8%) Known Parks: Discovery Park, formerly U.S. Army's Fort Lawton, Kiwanis Memorial Park, Magnolia Tidelands Park, etc. DISTRICTS Schools: 3 public, 2 private CAPITOL HILL QUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 3.8 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 762,500 USD (+3.7%) Known Parks: Washington Park and Arboretum, Volunteer Park, Madison Park, Cal Anderson Park, etc. Schools: 5 public, 8 private These neighborhoods were filtered and chosen for their quantity and distribution of parks, schools, public/private exercise facilities, environmental character for wildlife habitat/green corridors, protected riparian areas, and NORTHEAST wetlands. An existing study of areas of interest for the city of Seattle analyzing socioeconomic status and health risk, brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic was also applied QUICK FACTS: based on inputs including but not limited to average income Shape area: ~ 6.8 mi2 and home price, level of education, and primary language in the home. This study designated particular areas of Avg Home Selling Price: 1,030,000 USD (+8.4%) neighborhoods that could improve their shared public space Known Parks: Magnuson Park, Burke Gilman Trail, etc. 73or infrastructure in the future. Schools: 9 public, 7 private MAPPING INEQUALITY 74 From my knowledge living there, and just how much I have learned about the impacts of redlining I wanted to see how much of these laws are still visible, GIS lets us do that. Mapping inequality is a wonderful resource by the university of Richmond highly recommend, and from what I noticed these areas pertain a lot to the historical delineation of best or still desirable areas, Magnolia is a special little case but I don’t have time to talk about it. My impact areas although are pretty shared with the space of historical industry. Something I noticed pretty quickly was the historically redzones weren’t all popping up in my overlay today, but the areas of industry as a whole were. So now to keep moving forward I had to make a decision one which area to implement regenerative sport urbanism. 75 -5DOWNTOWNQUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 2.0 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 529,500 USD (-20.4%) Known Parks: Jim Ellis Freeway Park, Pier 62 and 63, Olympic Sculpture Park, Westlake Park etc. Schools: 0 public, 5 private -4GREATER DUWAMISHQUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 7.6 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 585,000 USD (+14.7%) Known Parks: Oxbow Park, Georgetown Playfield Schools: 0 public, 1 private, 7 trade -4CASCADEQUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 1.0 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 720,000 USD (-17.2%) 76 Known Parks: Lake Union Park, Denny Park, Cascade Playground, Terry Pettus Park, Fairview Park etc. Schools: 9 public, 7 private DOWNTOWN LOWEST QUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 2.0 mi2 SCORING Avg Home Selling Price: 529,500 USD (-20.4%) Known Parks: Jim Ellis Freeway Park, Pier 62 and 63, Olympic Sculpture Park, Westlake Park etc. DISTRICTS Schools: 0 public, 5 private GREATER DUWAMISH QUICK FACTS: Shape area: ~ 7.6 mi2 Avg Home Selling Price: 585,000 USD (+14.7%) Known Parks: Oxbow Park, Georgetown Playfield Schools: 0 public, 1 private, 7 trade These neighborhoods were filtered and chosen for their quantity and distribution of parks, schools, public/private exercise facilities, environmental character for wildlife habitat/green corridors, protected riparian areas, and CASCADE wetlands. An existing study of areas of interest for the city of Seattle analyzing socioeconomic status and health risk, brought on by the COVID-19 pandemic was also applied QUICK FACTS: based on inputs including but not limited to average income Shape area: ~ 1.0 mi2 and home price, level of education, and primary language in the home. This study designated particular areas of Avg Home Selling Price: 720,000 USD (-17.2%) neighborhoods that could improve their shared public space Known Parks: Lake Union Park, Denny Park, Cascade Playground, Terry 77or infrastructure in the future. Pettus Park, Fairview Park etc. Schools: 9 public, 7 private GREATER DUWAMISH OPPORTUNITY In June 2020, King 5 news reported that downtown Seattle had lost 2,685 businesses, for a lot of reasons. The city is working on assisting the public that exists downtown, and It’s a mix of a larger challenge that was outside of my scope. Cascade aka “SLU of Southlake Union”, is a newly revitalized zone with incredibly expensive and luxury hotels, a Google Office, some Amazon offices, and nice new park and lots of stormwater infrastructure, it looks great. This urban regeneration is expensive residential, hospitality, and big corps focused which is not what I am looking to do with my project. The Greater Duwamish has had my heart for a few years, which I didn’t really realize until I continued to explore this project, it was a tiny neighborhood you could barely see from the freeway that had the only indoor beach volleyball facility in Western Washington. A warehouse filled with sand, that couldn’t stay alive during COVID, a small example of a big issue in participatory sports today. The topography is a valley, of a historical wetland with one residential area. This district has: freight storage and warehouses for manufacturing, Beer and Art walks, the Duwamish longhouse, event hosting, a P-Patch garden, and a superfund site, Boeing air field. The complexity is so exciting and fun. Maps lie too. 78 79 5,062 GROSS ACREAGE 1 SUPERFUND SITE 1,376 POPULATION 85% INDUSTRIAL 4% COMMERCIAL 2% PARKING 7% VACANT <1% RESIDENTIAL 80 59% SIDEWALK ACCESS 5,062 GROSS ACREAGE 1 SUPERFUND SITE 1,376 POPULATION 85% INDUSTRIAL 4% COMMERCIAL 2% PARKING 7% VACANT <1% RESIDENTIAL 59% SIDEWALK ACCESS 81 5,062 GROSS ACREAGE 1 SUPERFUND SITE 1,376 POPULATION 85% INDUSTRIAL 4% COMMERCIAL 2% PARKING 7% VACANT <1% RESIDENTIAL 82 59% SIDEWALK ACCESS The greater Duwamish is just an industrial district to a lot of people, but to born and raised Seattlites it holds another purpose for the creatives. Manufacturing on the river with a deep hurtful history, and an adjacent historical salooning town called Georgetown. Spatially the Duwamish is the largest district of seattle, and 2% of that whole area is parking, this is like a landscape designer dream. That is about 101 acres of space. 83 TAKEAWAYS • Housing discrimination in 1940 can still be seen at the city scale in 2023 • Seattle ranking 6th in the U.S. major city data filtering process (National Scale) there are still incredibly uneven distributions to sport space • We could be so much better at planning for sport space if actual GIS datasets existed for them • This process becomes more and more complicated as complexity increases with scale Softwares used: Google Earth, Google MyMaps, Mapping InEquality by Richmond U and MapBox, QGIS, ArcGIS Web Browser Summary Steps: 1. Take your city and organize it by district 2. Start rganizing each districts data based on demographics, health statistics, and economics 3. Map/locate current facilities for sport (i.e. schools, golf courses, recreation centers, etc.) 4. Layer open space and natural area data 5. Look for areas where there are systemic scars putting residents more at risk of quality-of-life leisure activities 84 85 ANALYSIS SCALE 03: THE DISTRICT SCALE 86 ANALYSIS 87 GEORGETOWN ANALYSIS SPORTS ECONOMICS ENVIRONMENT DEMOGRAPHICS INCOME PARKS RACE WILDLIFE EDUCATION LEVEL STREET TREES PRIMARY LANGUAGE VEGETATION AGE HEALTH 88 GEORGETOWN ANALYSIS SPORTS DEMOGRAPHICS INFRASTRUCTURE CULTURE RACE SPORTS FACILITIES EDUCATION LEVEL PUBLIC SCHOOLS PRIMARY LANGUAGE PRIVATE SCHOOLS AGE TRADE SCHOOLS HEALTH STREETS TRAILS ZONING SIDEWALKS 89 DEMOGRAPHICS This info is updated every three years and is subject to change. Context Map ay igh w I-5 H DEMOGRAPHICS What I tried to do with this map was dissect this demographic data, on this incredibly notable i5 highway border. For total transparency I first began looking at this data in 2022, and it’s recently been updated so yay but no yay, the Greater Duwamish valley portion actually was moved to a brown, I have theories about mostly impacts of COVID. Prepare to zoom and dissect This is where a lot of my research and exploration on sport design and parks started to tap in. There was a study done in the U.S. where a city proposed two solutions, one to dropping a sport center facility into a community that was underprivileged, to remain walking distance to locals yet drivable to kids and or parents who had cars. It was great, but im not doing that, I’m making parks not buildings and the threats of gentrification on our project interventions is Seattle's Design Equity Scoring Key always lingering. Could use Little need of support outreach DEMOGRAPHICS Georgetown Brown 25.2% people of color 26% below poverty line 2.4% foreign born avg age 39.3 625 households Context Map Tourism centroid ay hw 5 H ig I- DEMOGRAPHICS Beacon Hill Brown 75.6% people of color 9% below poverty line 2.2% foreign born avg age 40.3 1,591 households Beacon Hill Purple 91.3% people of color What you see is this border of really unique 53.6% below poverty line community groups as well as economic standing. 52.1% foreign born avg age 32.6 Previously when this area was yellow, I wanted to flip what that research showed, and put the park 1,296 households systems in walking distance from the people who may need it yet not disrupt their potential cost of living, in a way i5 kind of came in handy. There is a lot more to potentially jacking up home prices in an area but hopefully I can touch on it. Seattle's Design Equity Scoring Key Could use Little need of support outreach RESIDENT Tourism centroid CONTEXT MAP Once again the methodology is reiterating the same process you know the drill, the environmental data really highlighted the 3 parks for the 1300 people that lived there, and the low amount of canopy and street trees This is a city of seattle zoning map that kind of helps communicate how the people that live in this valley are swimming industry around large warehouse buildings that cut off the horizon. Transit and movement on site involved a lot of me going into google maps and picking a random site like burger king on marginal way and trying to see how google would tell me to walk, ride a bus, or drive myself through the space up to a cake shop by Cleveland High school in Beacon Hill. But overall the main arteries of the space move in an X that rise about the site as on ramps off ramps and passages to beacon hill over the pacific railway and under I5. Identifying the main arteries was great because a lot of people don’t want to go for a jog down a busy road or idle traffic exhaust, and that meant this space can now be our public space, our little baby side roads and alleys with industrial history. ENVIRONMENT Tourism centroid INFRASTRUCTURE Tourism centroid TRAFFIC AND Tourism centroid TRANSIT OPEN SPACE OPPORTUNITY OPEN SPACE OPPORTUNITY When we start to view the streets as our public space, we can isolate our areas of opportunity. ADDITONAL DATA CREATION 98 I quickly realized so much of what I was seeing in GIS wasn’t displaying how much I could see on Google Earth, so I started implementing Google MyMaps to actually annotate the site accordingly. To make it tell the story of what is happening here. This process involved 2 monitors, with GIS, Google MyMaps, and Google street view all trying to get an accurate depiction of is that a house, is it an art studio, is it a restaurant for a 300 acre area. 99 The most vibrant data I could find was of the people that made this space their place. Art walks, beer tours, wine tasting, summer street markets, p-patch produce selling, the people were here and they are so cool. This is the data that can’t be quantified. TAKEAWAYS • The current mobility of the site moves in an X, and allows for potetnial pockets of movement beneath existing ramps over and under I-5 • The zoning and infrastructure in GIS doesn't even compare to the reality of the space and the value it holds for it's local residents and visitors • Common events in the area have already taken to the streets and adjusted traffic for markets, art walks, and other local gardening events. Sports and reinforcement of sport presence could fit in nicely. • Street trees are lacking in a hot parking lot filled area • GIS, Google Earth Google MyMaps, and Seattle Parcel viewer will never be able to communicate whats actually happening with the people in a place Summary Steps: 1. Take your district and begin to understand how the people use it 2. Understand where people may collect in regards to the greenspace 3. Consider how zoning can influence community collection 4. Analyze the impact of cars to the pedestrian, because this could lead to potential road change proposals 5. Don't forget to investigate the culture of the residents, the site begins and ends with people always. Begin considering what type of areas or demographics could support different 102 sport types • Walking mobility and pedestrianism is so vital already to the health of this community's tourism and placemaking • We could be a lot better about our data creation, and sharing in the U.S. • The city of Barcelona's sport and exercise dataset would be an influential piece of knowledge in order to plan American cities for sport in the future Softwares used: Google Earth, Google MyMaps, Seattle Design Equity Report, QGIS, ArcGIS Web Browser 103 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM ANALYSIS SCALE 04: THE NEIGHBORHOOD SCALE 104 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA ANALYSIS The most vibrant data I could find was of the people that made this space their place. Art walks, beer tours, wine tasting, summer street markets, p-patch produce selling, the people were here and they are so cool. This is the data that can’t be quantified. 105 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 6 STEPS TOWARD DESIGN Informed design steps attached to the methodology to aid designing the sport opportunities of neighborhoods discovered in analysis. These steps are incredibly crucial for designing the site and connecting sport to place. 106 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 6 STEPS TOWARD DESIGN 1 2 3 SOCIAL PRESENT SHORTEST SHED PROGRAM WALK 4 5 6 OPEN-SPACE SYSTEM-SPORT COMMUNITY POTENTIAL DESIGNATION ENGAGEMENT 107 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM SOCIAL 15 MINUTE WALK 1 SHED 10 MINUTE WALK 5 MINUTE WALK 108 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 1 SOCIALSHED I chose to determine my neighborhood center based on the collision of the two residential neighborhoods with the local tourism center. This area is then expanded touching the historic Van Asselt residential cluster, the historic Georgetown residential cluster, and the boundary between Beacon Hill. This area will become my focus area ranging predominately in the 10 minute walkable area. 109 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 2 110 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 2 PRESENTPROGRAM The second step then analyzes what kind of uses are existing within this system and 15 minute radius from residential neighborhoods. This allows for an understanding of how the existing system could attract designed areas catered to existing use. Embracing complexity is the goal, to use it as a guiding designer. 111 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 2 112 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 2 PRESENTPROGRAM 40% Industrial 20% Residents 20% Businesses 10% Hospitality/Restaurants 10% Parks, Arts, Trade Schools 113 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 3 Shortest walk from offices to art studios and galleries to parks 114 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 3 SHORTESTWALK Engineered pathways using Rhino+Grasshopper allows for software based potentials between different points on site where people may move by foot in the most efficient way possible. This allows for hypothesizing of where street design implementation of sports to encourage and support foot traffic in the area. Strava Running Data + 115 116 117 118 119 120 SHORTEST WALK 121 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 4 122 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 4 OPEN-SPACEPOTENTIAL Determining existing open space is important for understanding where a city can expand and think creatively about public space in the area. In this area, underutilized vacancy through Google Earth, Google MyMaps, and Seattle Parcel Viewer 123 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 4 124 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 4 OPEN-SPACEPOTENTIAL Determining existing open space is important for understanding where a city can expand and think creatively about public space in the area. In this area, underutilized vacancy through Google Earth, Google MyMaps, and Seattle Parcel Viewer, then combining with shortest walk to find opportunity. 125 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 5 126 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 5 SYSTEM-SPORTDESIGNATION Selecting particular sports that could be enjoy based on their chosen paths and demographics in a space. 127 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 5 128 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 5 SYSTEM-SPORTDESIGNATION Selecting particular sports that could be enjoy based on their chosen paths and demographics in a space. Create a map and lcoate where all of these possibilities for sport can occur. 129 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM 6 DESIGN NON-PROFIT COMMUNITY GROUP OPPORTUNITIES FOR POST- INDUSTRIAL RETHINKING FOR COMMUNITY EXERCISE 130 DELANEY HOPEN - MLA 6 COMMUNITYENGAGEMENT Now that you have followed steps 1-5 you 50% TEAM can have this maximized outcome where you and the community can say of this potential what sports would be fun for you and how 10% INDIVIDUAL will we get there? Do you have non-profits interested in buying this vacant space, are you interested in some? Overall step 6 is be a 20% OPEN SPACE good listener, and maybe just make all those flexible green space where a kid can do some 20% COMMUNITY SPECIFIED cardio training. 131 REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM TAKEAWAYS • Being able to read what the landscape is telling you holds just as much value as to what the people are telling you • Look for ways the community is already placemaking and tie exercise into it. Beer and wine tours promote walking, Georgetown P-Patch gardens promote a healthy relationship with nature, they should blend together. • There is so much opportunity spatially to implement a larger system of sport integration through street design, as well as vibrant community activity • The location negatives can be looked at as positives for seasonal intervention, like underline sport spaces as infrastrucal canopies out of the rain. • GIS sport data needs so much love. Let me help please. Summary Steps: 1. Identify how much enviornmental canopy and green space is needed for the district youre focused on 2. Consider what space can now be freed up for public use instead of vehicular 3. Begin understanding how transportation by vehicle helps your system function 4. Identify potential partners in ways that can promote physical health, and build new bridges between adjacent communities, mixing is good 5. Do whatever you can to make your data accurate, investigate, and build your network through all softwares and resources 6. Dont be afraid to break the current system, especially if it means removing 132 power from the SOV DELANEY HOPEN - MLA Softwares/Materials used: Google Earth, Google MyMaps, Rhino, Grasshopper, GIS Adobe, Seattle Parcel Viewer, NHANES Sports based on Ethnicity Race and Income for Obesity Data, Reddit, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter 133 DESIGN + IMPLEMENTATION SCALE 05: LETS PLAY 134 DESIGN + IMPLEMENTATION What Casas Valle gives us is this understanding of how sport is stressed by space, and games often have measurement restrictions on them so they see a lot of pressure. They are an after thought, or they are moved outside city limits which stressed inequity of who can afford to get there and use them. 135 "By continuous urban development and densification of the existing city many sports facilities get under pressure spatially (Van der Ploeg 2010, Bosch 2009 pp. 44-53). This results in translocations of sport fields toward city edges, because of building construction opportunities. Parallel, the spatial quality of many sports facilities is often bad and ugly (Van der Linden 2009): no proper spatial planning, mono functional, unattractive and anonymous architecture, badly embedded in the neighbourhood, hidden behind closed green areas, little or no relationship to public space; sport (parks) are often isolated from its urban surroundings.” -Daniel Casas Valle, Sport in the City 136 DANIEL CASAS VALLE Urban Designer and Researcher Urbandynamics, Portugal 137 7 1 3 5 2 4 6 After understanding what is now a masterplan area I needed to make this site and it's organization a bit more digestible. Moving from open space, to suggested sport implementation areas, to how it could directly be applied spatially I chose to break this area down into 7 areas. PROCESS PHASING, RUNNERS LOOPS, AND CIRCULATION Phasing adds control over a 300 acre area. This will assist in Masterplanning. Our shortest walk also offers the ability to analyze runners loops. This is beneficial for the athlete and street design. in order to move throughout this space to consider sport use is running. Running, biking, and transport- sport would accommodate the current issue of lack of canopy in the space, while proposing a speed hierarchy onto these area boundaries. By minimizing space and assigning the predominant space to the pedestrian this requires site analysis. "1. Customization – sport as an urban meeting place a. When a sport place combines different aspects of the toolbox, it can have a role as an urban meeting point, for people of the street, neighbourhood, city or region. For the topic ́sport as a social meeting place ́, it is important to open-up the sport planning. 2. Increase sport inclusive thinking a. In the perspective of the active or healthy city model, sport plays a significant part. Therefore, it should be logic to promote ́sport inclusive thinking ́ in planning. Not as a ś eparated functionality ́, but as one of the important activities that improves the living quality in general. It should be logic to think about sport potential and possibilities in every urban spatial and urban plan, as it is for individual motorized mobility. b. There is a culture clash between spatial planning and sport planning. Differences as: specific interests, planning periods, investment flows, political departments, development logics, technical requirements, laws and regulations and professionals should be discusses.” -Daniel Casas Valle, Sport in the City 140 DANIEL CASAS VALLE Urban Designer and Researcher Urbandynamics, Portugal 141 "1. Sport Size/typology 2. Position in the City: a. Combine large complexes and stadia with things like restaurants, shops, hotels, and music venues for a larger economic value to small businesses. b. Think about the diversification of uses by creating an urban hub, while diversifying the crowd who can use it (aka different sport types, accessibility, shade/ comfort etc.) c. To attract visitors sport should be visible 3. Relation with public space a. The connection and relationship between the sport entrance and city context is essential b. Space manipulation can turn a “purely-functional place… into a versatile, well-used urban place” 4. Visibility a. “The visibility-aspect of today's sport creates the need for a stage. Watching, showing and chatting, making sport a social place where people can meet. Striking design enhances the image of sport.” 5. Distance and Proximity i. Connect the sport to the city life, enlarge the visibility of sport, create an attractive and safe public space that connects to the environment ii. Stimulate multifunctional use 6. Accessibility a. Create a slow traffic route with an attractive public space to encourage physical movement b. Take note of cycle and vehicular parking to plan how people could move 7. Public Access and Lockability a. Visibility does not have to suffer from closing off during particular hours, but consider how designs can function without daylight hour use (materials, etc.) 8. Flexibility a. Designated flat, paved or lawn, open space paired with raised courts or surfaces can act as community gathering aside from solely sport play. Bi-product spaces for access like parking lots and walkways also serve as such. Programmatic Goals 1. Sport Chains a. Create as much cohesive interaction between different athletes as possible, combining organized and non-organized, individual and group, allows for more exchange 2. Create smart combinations a. In Denmark hospitality and sport are deeply intertwined with the history of Kulturhusets b. In America Sports bars and drinking culture of competitive nature are deeply intertwined lol 3. Program Mix Organizational Aspects 1. Policy and Target Group a. Mixing consists of different sports, library, playground, restaurant / canteen, hotel (for athletes), centre for sports, municipal sports department and a conference centre. This centre attracts different people and has an area of increasing function. 2. Use a. On one hand, is multiple use is financially more efficient, on the other hand, the synergy between the users sometimes is overestimated. Clarity about the principles and goals of multiple use is important in the planning phase. 3. Maintenance a. Requirement to use a sports facility efficiently is a good match of use by various users and associations. Money for professional maintenance and management is often lacking. Allowing new sports groups on existing sports facilities therefore is difficult. 4. Developing Sport Space and Facilities a. If sport in an urban environment is considered important, it is essential to take sport fully in the development phase. Integration after construction of a neighbourhood is often financially and spatially impossible. b. Intensive collaboration between the designers and the public space of the city department is necessary. c. At the same time there is stagnation in the implementation of the construction. The smart combination with allotments next to the gym makes combined use possible; children are sporting while parents harvest vegetables.” -Daniel Casas Valle, Sport in the City DANIEL CASAS Design Guidelines: VALLE Takeaways: 1. Understand sport is representation, and inclusivity in the landscape. 2. Parking lots are your friend when your planning and designing for sport. 3. When there is no public park space, make public park space. The streets are your friend too. 4. Proper attention to detail is important. specifically lighting and accessibility can make a space feel safe for one and not another if brushed over. 5. Consider time of day, month, and year, and how your design can support grandma on a walk, a kiddo skating home from school, and event hosting for sporting events and street-shut down. 6. Support the athlete as a designer, and respect their void, even if that means you do a little less. 7. Daniel is right, mix as much as possible. Communities, uses, etc. you have a special opportunity as a Landscape Architect to bring people together. 8. Plan for heavy use, which means flexibility, long term wear-and-tear, and the impacts of climate change " FINALLY, THE GREATEST CHALLENGE LIES IN BRINGING TOGETHER THE WORLDS OF SPORT AND SPACE, AS PART OF THE MULTIFUNCTIONAL CITY. IF THIS IS DONE BY MUTUAL RESPECT AND A HEALTHY PORTION OF CHALLENGE, IT CAN GIVE A POSITIVE BOOST FOR BOTH THE SPORT AND FOR THE CITY -Daniel Casas Valle, Sport in the City " Special thanks to Hannah Chapin, Celia Hensey, Skylar Holloway, Ignacio Lopez Buson, Amoreena Miller, Rob Ribe, Philip Speranza, Kory Russel, Mary Polites, Cameron McCarthy LAP, my Webfoot family, my BCN Urban design group, and our MLA-BLA entire cohort and staff at UO for being such a supportive body these past 3 years. and my Mom, Dad, Grandparents, Mackey, Zane and Alexa for always asking if I'm sleeping even when they know the answer. 1. Friedman, Michael T., and Jacob Bustad, ‘Sport and Urbanization’, in Robert Edelman, and Wayne Wilson (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Sports History, Oxford Handbooks (2017; online edn, Oxford Academic, 10 May 2017), https://doi.org/10.1093/ oxfordhb/9780199858910.013.3, accessed 16 June 2023. 2. Santiago, J., & Sola, M. (2019). Superilla Sant Antoni. ESCOFET. https://www.escofet.com/en/projects/streetscape/superilla-sant- antoni 3. Dumpelmann, S. (2022). Landscapes for sport: Histories of physical exercise, sport, and health. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. 4. Louv, R. (2008). Last child in the Woods. Algonquin Books. 5. Vamplew, W. (2022). Sports economics for non-economists. Routledge Taylor & Francis Group. 6. Miles, E. (2022). Nature is a human right: Why we’re fighting for green in a Grey World. Penguin Random House. 7. Person, Luis, J., & Paramio-Salcines. (2013, July 24). Sport and urban regeneration: 26: Routledge Handbook of Sport Policy. Taylor & Francis. https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780203807217-26/sport-urban-regeneration-juan-luis-paramio- salcines 8. Kompier, V., & Valle, D. C. (2015, March 19). Sport in the city - A new design and planning tool for sport facilities and outdoor space in urban environments - Amsterdam, Berlin, Copenhagen, Porto, Valencia. Academia.edu. https://www.academia.edu/10338266/ Sport_in_the_City_a_new_design_and_planning_tool_for_sport_facilities_and_outdoor_space_in_urban_environments_Amsterdam_ Berlin_Copenhagen_Porto_Valencia 9. Dickson, G., & Zhang, J. J. (2020, December 7). Sports and urban development: An introduction. International Journal of Sports Marketing and Sponsorship. https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/IJSMS-11-2020-0194/full/html 10. Kleen, B. (2022, June 14). How U.S. sports facilities can better serve cities. Global Sport Matters. https://globalsportmatters.com/ research/2022/06/14/how-american-sports-facilities-can-better-serve-communities/ 11. Kleen, B. (2022, June 14). How U.S. sports facilities can better serve cities. Global Sport Matters. https://globalsportmatters.com/ research/2022/06/14/how-american-sports-facilities-can-better-serve-communities/ 12. Council, B. C. (2022, October 17). The new urban mobility plan puts pedestrians at the centre. The new urban mobility plan puts pedestrians at the centre | Info Barcelona | Barcelona City Council. https://www.barcelona.cat/infobarcelona/en/tema/mobility-and- transport/the-new-urban-mobility-plan-takes-on-board-84-of-demands-and-suggestions-put-Rforward-2_1218221.hEtml SOURCES RESOURCES Delaney Hopen Masters In Landscape Architecture, UO 2023 Bachelors in Geological Sciences, Minor in Landscape Architecture, UI 2020 Delaney Hopen Beach Volleyball (little), UO 2020-2021 Outside Hitter/Defensive Specialist/Libero, UI 2016-2020 Coach 2013-Present REGENERATIVE SPORT URBANISM