Tag Archives: Toronto

Job Posting: Director, Jane’s Walk

What is Jane’s Walk?

Jane’s Walk, a Project of Tides Canada Initiatives (TCI), celebrates the ideas and legacy of urbanist Jane Jacobs by getting out exploring their neighbourhoods and understanding how their communities and work.

Its signature – free walking tours held on the first weekend of May each year – gives locals a platform to tell stories of their neighbourhoods, encourages conversations about who plans and builds them and the experience of those who live there, and in the process, inspires people to come together to make them more walkable and liveable.

On the first Jane’s Walk weekend in May 2007, 1,000 people took part in 27 walks in . Since then, the event has inspired walkers everywhere, and the -based initiative has seen explosive growth in activity during the annual weekend.

During the fifth anniversary Jane’s Walk weekend in May 2011, 20,000 people strolled in 500+ free, volunteer-led walks in 75 cities across 15 countries worldwide, including in Berlin, Dublin, Goa, Guadalajara, Los Angeles, Madrid, Manhattan, Montreal, New Orleans, Tel Aviv, Whitehorse, La Paloma, Uruguay and Wuhan, China! [and Phoenix too!]

Job Description

Jane’s Walk seeks a visionary and entrepreneurial individual to provide strategic and operational leadership as Director. This person will be interested in guiding the initiative through its next stage of evolution, and will be excited by the challenge of establishing its long-term financial .

This is an extraordinary time in the evolution of Jane’s Walk. As local participation and global interest are at all-time highs Jane’s Walk faces the core challenge of developing a long-term financially sustainable model for delivering the initiative. The Director has an exceptional opportunity to turn a strong and promising initiative into a truly sustainable, global phenomenon.

The Director works closely with, and is answerable to, an Advisory Committee of committed volunteer members and to Tides Canada Initiatives (TCI), which acts as financial and legal trustee.

Position Responsibilities

  • Collaboratively lead Jane’s Walk stakeholders to develop short, medium and long-term strategies for the organization
  • Ensure the successful delivery of the 2012 Jane’s Walk in Toronto, and support the delivery of the 2012 Jane’s Walks across Canada and worldwide
  • Develop and implement initiatives that contribute to long-term financial sustainability, including sponsorships, global licensing models, government grants, foundation grants and earned revenue
  • Assume overall leadership, with the support of the Advisory Committee, to position Jane’s Walk on a long-term path of growth and success
  • Represent the initiative and related advocacy issues and programming with an array of stakeholders including the Advisory Committee, sponsors, media, governments, volunteers and a broader public audience
  • Be responsible for the complete financial, statistical, accounting and HR records of the Project, and ensure the accuracy, integrity and timeliness of all activity, financial, and other reporting to TCI and other stakeholders; lead the preparation of the annual budget for Advisory Committee and TCI approval and prepare regular budget updates
  • Ensure that Jane’s Walk activities comply with the Project’s description and all policies and procedures of TCI
  • Supervise all Project staff, volunteers and contractors; report vacation liability to TCI HR; ensure performance evaluations carried out for Project staff; advise TCI HR of any personnel issues

Position Requirements

  • Experience leading substantial projects and/or organizations
  • Strong entrepreneurial bent with experience and interest in revenue-generating strategies for non-profits
  • A proven fundraising track record
  • Experience preparing grant proposals and regular activity reports
  • Exceptional communication skills (writing, speaking, presenting) and ability to convey ideas and stories in both traditional and social media
  • An excellent networker and facilitator with experience managing volunteers and working collaboratively
  • Familiarity with, and passion for, a broad range of issues related to vibrant cities,  planning, design, and literacy, civic engagement, and walkability
  • Ability to manage a small office in a cost-efficient manner, providing or supporting operational requirements at all levels (IT, communications, etc.)
  • Familiarity with preparing and monitoring budgets and reviewing financial statements

The annual compensation range is $65,000 to $80,000 commensurate with experience. A term contract will be negotiated and will be renewable based on funding and upon agreement by both parties.

Individuals with the requisite experience are invited to apply with a covering letter and resume (in ONE PDF or Word document) in confidence to chair@janeswalk.net by October 24, 2011.

Only those candidates who are being considered for interviews will be contacted.

For more information about Jane’s Walk and Tides Canada Initiatives, please visit:
http://www.janeswalk.net/ http://tidescanada.org/projects/ 

As Jane’s Walk is a Project of Tides Canada Initiatives Society (TCI), the selected candidate will be a contractor to, or an employee of, TCI.

[via JanesWalk.net]

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Green Bike

Jane Jacobs bike

Via: the good bike

Early this morning, I was out on my and came across the Jane Jacobs bike on Albany Avenue. I want to thank you for the smile, and for reminding me of the good things: of Jane and seeing her in her poncho; and of that little corner park. Jane’s spirit is there, and the bike is great. Thank you.

Linda ()

 

 

 

 

 

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Jane Jacobs Compares Toronto & Montreal, 1969

A short television segment from 1969, shortly after Jacobs moved to Canada.

httpvh://www..com/watch?v=f9833TPWSCY

From CBC TV’s “The Way It Is” program, circa 1969, urbanist and author Jane Jacobs compares late 1960s and Montreal on how they have been planned and built, while condemning major highways planned for GTO.

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Jane Jacobs Day—May 4, 2011

Missed this two weeks ago…

 

City of Proclamation

Jane Jacobs Day: May 4, 2011

WHEREAS this year marks the 5th anniversary of Jane’s Walk, inspired by the lifelong work of Jane Jacobs in which meet and mingle on walking tours of their neighbourhoods. Today, Jane’s Walk takes place in more than 70 around the world and there are more than 100 free walking tours in Toronto this year.

Jane Jacobs was born on May 4, 1916 in Scranton, Pennsylvania and moved to Toronto in 1968. Until her death in 2006, she inspired and taught the world how to understand and value cities, almost single-handedly influencing and transforming our ideas about life.

Jane Jacobs was a writer, outspoken urban activist, a philosopher and an innovator. She observed how cities function and analyzed how people can live in a world of conflicting moral principles. Published 50 years ago, her book “The Death and Life of Great ” brought into focus the premise that cities are engines of growth and that their vitality stems from the variety of activities people engage in.

Jane Jacobs’ arguments were from the ground up, with in-depth observations of everyday places, teaching us about ‘eyes on the street’ and life on the sidewalk. She believed that walkable, dense, compact and diverse neighbourhoods were the hallmarks of a healthy city where people connect and engage their creative synergies. She had faith in the wisdom of local residents and encouraged us to love and embrace our city.

NOW THEREFORE, I, Mayor Rob Ford, on behalf of Toronto City Council, do hereby proclaim May 4, 2011 as “Jane Jacobs Day” and recognize that Jane’s Walk, honours a great Torontonian, Jane Jacobs – one of the foremost urban thinkers and activists of our times.

 

Mayor Rob Ford
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Cities Have Everybody

 

Christie and Davenport, Toronto

Jane Jacobs Mural Christie and Davenport,

 

Photograph by urban sherpa (Erkin Ozberk) on Flickr

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Celebrate People’s History: Jane Jacobs

Earlier this year, the Toronto Free Gallery and Groundswell presented Celebrate ’s !, a show of poster art created by over ninety artists to document the hidden history of social justice movements.  Among the posters included in the exhibit was this Jane Jacobs poster by Sabrina Jones:

 

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Jane Jacobs’ Place

Here are some excerpts from an interesting article in My Town Crier on the current owner of Jane Jacobs storied house in .

[...]

An icon, Jacobs’ ideas about how to make liveable have been lauded by thinkers around the world, but especially in her adopted home of Toronto, where in the 1970s she helped defeat the Spadina Expressway plan that would have uprooted the Annex. After her death in April 2006, Jacobs’ son decided to sell the house. When [Terry] Montgomery saw the listing, he bought it.

[...]

“I often think that if I have to write something I tend to write it here rather than at the office, because I think her writing skill might permeate the house a bit,” he says with a laugh.

Whether or not he’s aided by her spirit, Montgomery is certainly aided by Jacobs’ ideas at his firm, Montgomery Sisam, as he works on projects such as a new bicentennial bridge to Fort York and the athletes village for the upcoming Pan Am Games. Although his own interest in buildings began as a child growing up in Lawrence Park, he says his thinking shifted when he encountered Jacobs’ ideas.

[...]

With the neighbourhood still calling to mind so much of what Jacobs stood for, Montgomery says he sometimes feels she hasn’t left.

“Sometimes I sense (her) spirit is here. The thing is she was a really independent thinker, you know. And you don’t come across really independent thinkers that much. She probably left that spirit here, I’d say.”

You can read the full article here.

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Book Review—What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs

“You can observe a lot just by looking” —Yogi Berra.

Starting with her classic essay ‘Downtown is for People” and continuing in her seminal Death & Life of Great American Cities, Jane Jacobs transformed thinking by building theories around her concrete observations, not the abstract theories that had dominated post-war thought. Jacobs advocated an integrated form of urbanism.

Jacobs’ approach was simply.  Observe the interdependence of and structures in the city. Because of her, we think of cities differently. We understand that mixed-uses and pedestrian traffic are important. Few would argue these points. So what more can be said about Jane Jacobs? As it turns out, plenty.

In What We See: Advancing the Observations of Jane Jacobs, 30 essayists try to make sense of their own cities or situations in light of what Jacobs’ observed in her and other writings. The book is the joint work of the Center for the Living City and New Village Press and edited by Stephen A. Goldsmith and Lynne Elizabeth.

*        *        *

With 30 authors from a variety of backgrounds, contributing essays, the reader will be exposed to at least one or two new scholars, activists and thinkers. Sure, there are some of the expected heavy-hitters the fields of planning/design such as Jan Gehl, Janette Sadik-Kahn, and Nan Ellin. But their observations are enhanced by the presence of some unique viewpoints, including a biologist, a youth minister, a playwright, and a PBS correspondent, among others.

While in another setting, this diversity could be confusing, it works here as a perfect tribute to Jane’s integrated approach to viewing the city. Indeed, these diverse voices reflect Jacobs’ observation that “it is fatal to specialize”* The extensive list of contributors mean that not only are multiple perspectives covered, but also many locations. Places such as Missoula, Toronto, Germany, and Mumbai are profiled. This captures a breadth of urban environments and dispels the notions that Jacobs’ work was only applicable to midtown Manhattan or downtown Toronto.

The essays are thoughtfully grouped into six sections: Vitality of the Neighbourhood; The Virtue of Seeing; Cities, Villages, Streets; The Organized Complexity of Planning; Design for Nature, Design for People; and Economic Instincts. Each section has four to six essays.

As they are too many essays to comment on each one separately here is a cross-section of some of my personal highlights that , reflect that diversity of the book:

  • The Mirage of the Efficient City,” by economist Sanford Ikeda, touches on a pet peeve of mine: the quest by city halls to create a more ‘efficient city.’ In this essay, Ikeda reminds us that cities are inefficient in a good, necessary way.
  • In “Nine Ways of Looking at Ourselves (Looking “at Cities),” social activist Arlene Goldbard gives us a toolkit to help us emulate how Jacobs approached the observations of her urban environment.
  • The Village Inside,” by urbanologists Matias Echanove and Rahul Srivastava, re-imagines the Dharavi slum of Mumbai through the eyes of Jane Jacobs. This was a provocative pierce that illustrates how Jacobs’ observations are applicable almost everywhere.
  • Architect and professor James Stockard’s essay “The Obligation to Listen, Learn, Teach—Patiently,” highlights why it is important to connect with the public on planning issues; including the dry technical ones like zoning.
  • Janine Benyus applies the lessons of biomimicry to the ideals of Jacobs in “Recognizing What Works: A Conscious Emulation of Life’s Genius,” While a biologist, Benyus has a long connection with Jacobs; she studied Jacobs’ writing while learning how to write.
  • In “When Places Have Deep Economic Histories” sociologist Saskia Sassen looks at the intersection of the knowledge economy and 21st-century urban industry, and how cities can make their past work for their future.

The only essay that fell flat for me was Clare Cooper Marcus’s discussion of planning around children, but emphasizing the cul-de-sac. While it was undoubtably made to challenge preconceived notions of the suburbs, I could not see Jacobs’e agreeing at all with her observations.

One shocking omission is the lack of a political dimension. While there were contributions from past politicians, such as David Crombie and Jaime Lerner that danced around the political—in particular Lerner’s observation that “the idea that action should only be taken after all the answers and the resources have been found is a sure recipe for paralysis”—the essay avoided any overt political commentary.

Whether this is because be because of a narrow urban focus of the editors or a more intentional decision to make the book apolitical, it is a glaring absence. Jacobs never shied away from the most contentious politic issues of her time, whether it be her public battles with Robert Moses, moving to Canada to keep her sons from being drafted to fight in Vietnam or her published book supporting Quebec separatism.

Another shortcoming of the book was the study guide. I was looking forward to using these questions for a jumping of point for a series of blog articles. However, instead of following the conversational and intimate tone of the rest of the bookand of Jane’s own writings—the questions were academic and jargon filled, more appropriate for a final exam than a book club or blog post. Moreover, the questions are lumped together at the end, making it them seem an after-thought. They would have been more effective at the end of each essay, or even each section.

*        *        *

This book is timely. With the approach the 50th anniversary of Death & Life of Great American Cities, we need, more than ever, to advance our observations. Just as in 1961, we are struggling with an upheaval of how our urban areas function. The financial crisis spawned by the largely suburban mortgage meltdown has us rethinking how and where we live. The gulf oil spill highlighting the costs of even consuming domestic oil, has people talking about our addiction to the automobile.

I am amazed at how accurately she predicted much of our current situation in her last book Dark Ages Ahead. If anyone had any doubts before the global recession that Jacobs was right about the interdependence of everything, and the need for an integrated approach, they should be answered now.

At the dawn of the ‘century of the city’, we would do well to take another look at Jacobs examination of the urban environment. What We See does just that. And in doing so, it introduces a new generation of urban thinkers, who—while influenced by Jane—are developing a new generation of urban visions and strategies to cope with our new generation of urban problems.

I strongly urge you to read (and reread) this book. But, while doing so, please remember that the purpose of the of the book isn’t too simply to reflection on the observations Jane Jacobs. Rather it is to inspire each of us to advance our own observations of ‘what we see.’

*        *        *

Other reviews worth reading:

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Quick Take: Where Jane Lived

Jane Jacobs’ home at 69 Albany Road, in ’s  Annex . She lived here for 37 years, from 1968 until her death in 2006.  Via ~woot~.

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Books: The Battle For Gotham

I haven’t read this book yet, but it’s near the top of my ‘to read’ list.

Excerpt from The Battle for Gotham: New York in the Shadow of Robert Moses and Jane Jacobs by urban critic and journalist Roberta Brandes Gratz.

To look at recent New York City history through the lens of the conflicting urban views of Moses and Jacobs is to gain a new understanding of the city today. This lens provides a small measure by which to evaluate the kind of big and modest projects outlined in this book. I did not have that lens either growing up or as a reporter for The New York Post from the mid-1960s until late in the 1970s covering city development issues. Eventually, I understood that in my writing I was immersing myself in the web of challenges personified in the conflict between the urban perspectives of Moses and Jacobs.

Two things helped develop that lens for me: Reading Robert Caro’s The Power Broker: Robert Moses and the Fall of New York when it was published in 1974 and reading, meeting and developing a lasting friendship with Jane Jacobs in 1978. My own urban vision had been shaped earlier during my 15 years as a reporter, meeting and learning from all over the city and watching positive and negative city policies unfold. But that urban vision was deepened and added to by that Moses/Jacobs lens and was expressed in my first book, The Living City : How America’s Cities Are Being Revitalized by Thinking Small in a Big Way, first published by Simon & Schuster in 1989. “Urban Husbandry” was the term I coined in that book t odescribe a regeneration approach that reinvigorates and builds ona ssets already in place, adding to instead of replacing long-evolving strengths.

From the mid 1960s to the late 1970s, I reported for The New York Post on the impact of the great social and economic dislocations in the city. There were the urban renewal projects in Greenwich Village and the Upper West Side and most dramatically, the opening of Co-Op City which vacuumed out so many from the Grand Concourse and accelerated the decay of the South Bronx. I covered school decentralization battles in Ocean Hill/Brownsville, urban renewal on the Lower East Side and learned the fascinating evolution of Washington Heights while working on an in depth series about Henry Kissinger , whose family settled there after fleeing Germany in 1938, after he was appointed Secretary of State. There were public housing conflicts, landlord scandals in Times Square and on the Upper West Side, and middle-income apartment shortages. New urban renewal projects and battles to save landmarks all got my attention. But I had no knowledge of the role of Robert Moses in shaping urban renewal policies,locally and nationally, until Caro’s extraordinarily well-researched and thorough opus.

I had heard a little about Jane Jacobs’ activism in Greenwich Village, particularly fighting the West Village Urban Renewal and the Lower Manhattan Expressway, but I had not read The Death and Life of Great American Cities. When I finally did read it, just before I was heading to Toronto to meet her, I discovered a way of understanding the city that I could relate to, a way that I had instinctively come to believe during years of reporting on community-based stories, an understanding that Jane believed all keen observers are capable of developingon their own. Over the years, she challenged me, broadened my thinking and encouraged me to look, observe and understand way beyond what I had already learned.

This book now looks back on the city as I first experienced it growing up and then wrote about it as a New York Post reporter. By using the Moses-Jacobs lens to examine some of the issues I wrote about in the late 1960s and l970s, I come to a different conclusion than many experts on how the city reached the ultra-successful and constantly adapting condition of today – even if suddenly tempered by a colossal national economic meltdown.

The perspective of time is very useful.

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