dbl96 wrote: ↑Fri Aug 11, 2023 1:24 pm
abc wrote: ↑Thu Aug 10, 2023 3:50 pm
dsriggs wrote: ↑Wed Aug 09, 2023 5:21 pm
Yeah, imagine if we had a large public square in the centre of Adelaide! Maybe you could even add some more. Can you imagine if we had, like, 5 squares spread throughout the CBD? Maybe another one in North Adelaide for good measure? But, alas...
you fail to see the difference between a public plaza and a square which is surrounded by roads such as we have in Adelaide. Our squares are a joke compared to European plazas.
A plaza on the side of Rundle Mall, which is a pedestrian zone and did exist for a short time created an entirely different atmosphere in the centre of town.
This can be fixed by reconfiguring the layout of roads in and around the squares.
At the moment the squares are glorified traffic islands, and far too much of the squares space is eaten up with roads. The aim should be to reduce the overall area of roads, slow the traffic down so it is less of a barrier to pedestrian movement, and maximise the connected area of public open space. Where this is impractical (the Grote-Wakefield connection through Victoria Square) a modest-scaled underpass could be considered.
Part of the issue is that the 5 squares in Adelaide (and also the others in North Adelaide) are neither parks nor squares. They're just a bit of each. Squares can be bound by roads or have roads through them, but you're right in that the roads eat up too much space. Further, the roads are arterials and that just doesn't work at all. If you're crossing traffic lights over 4 lanes of traffic, then it just isn't going to work. Also, not being paved makes them more like a park, but nobody is going to them to experience an island of tranquility in the city - they're loud as hell from vehicle noise. And not being paved also gives them less utility over the course of a whole year because when it's wet or dewy, you're just not going to walk on it.
Someone later mentions "this aint Prague". Well to continue on those lines, I'd say a couple of things. Public squares in CR (and all over Europe, but I live here so this is where I'll comment) aren't necessarily devoid of traffic. Actually, it's quite common for tram lines to go dead down the middle of them. But at their periphery, they directly front buildings on squares. Adelaide has buildings (almost 0 retails as well), then road, then square/park. That just doesn't work. If you have foot traffic
around the park, you'll get foot traffic within.