
Minneapolis College of Art and Design's Park(ing) space on the corner in Minneapolis' Warhouse District. Photo: Paul Schmelzer, MnIndy
“Parking” took on a new meaning Friday in parts of Minneapolis and St. Paul. The annual Park(ing) Day had groups of activists and artist hauling sod, grills and lawnchairs to parking spaces, where they plugged the meter all day and hosted impromptu parks. At ten locations — two in St. Paul, eight in Minneapolis — these temporary green spaces were up and running, most through 3 p.m. Friday, but some even later.
Begun in 2005 by the San Francisco-based art collective Rebar to call attention to a part of that city without much green space, it’s now a national phenomenon, with parks being created in urban areas coast to coast. Minneapolis’ day, organized by the group Solutions Twin Cities, is all legit. Co-organizer Troy Gallas said he called the city of Minneapolis and they told him they were fine with it — as long as meters are plugged. Plus, he added, St. Paul’s city hall ran a space this year.
Gallas’ said the event in most cities points out the lack of good green spaces, but here it’s more of a reminder of them and what they provide us. His parter at Solutions, Colin Kloecker, points out that much of downtown’s street culture happens in skyways and corporate plazas. “That’s not really public space. [Park(ing) Day] shows that it’s important to have a commons.”

Space 150 employees got their spot right outside work, in front of Minneapolis' Moose & Sadie's. Photo: Paul Schmelzer, MnIndy
A spot taken over by staff and students from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design used a bed of sod to host picnic blankets, trays of food, yard games and camp chairs. MCAD staffer Megan Leafblad, in a sun hat, occasionally jumped up to offer Twizzler’s to passersby in cars.
Across the street, employees at the ad agency Space 150, having already fired up the grill, were offering brats to people at MCAD’s “park.”
While the event isn’t anti-car, Kloecker said, “It’s a people-centered activity, instead of a car-focused one. Not a lot of dialogue can happen if everyone is in their cars… unless it’s road rage.”
Heidi Keel, a brand planner at Space 150 agreed. “It’s a way of being a part of the larger community.” (In that spirit, they live-streamed the view of the scene outside their window so co-workers at their New York office could watch the fun.) And James Patrick, an instructor at the IPR music school down the block, seconds that.
“All day I try to be a crabby downtown jerk,” he joked, “but today I find I just can’t do that.”
Various participants and passersby saw the project as about either celebrating green space or injecting some wonder into the sometimes drab urban landscape. That could be perceived as political, Patrick says, but only slightly so.
“If you weren’t doing it in an area surrounded by capitalism it wouldn’t work as well,” he said. “My first thought seeing this was: Who’s paying them? I’m glad to hear the answer is nobody.”
One woman, walking her dog past the scene, wasn’t keen on the idea. “It seems kind of weird to take up the spaces that business owners need. And there is a park just two blocks away. I don’t get it.”
“One [parking-spot-turned-park] would’ve been enough,” she added.
But Toni Christiano, who is a host for the Monte Carlo restaurant’s outdoor seating area, likes the injection of green. “I wish it would stay there.”
That was a common sentiment on 2nd Avenue. Ryan Terrell, an IPR student strumming a guitar at one of the parking spaces, said he wishes it’d happen every day. To that, another IPR student had a suggestion for a winter version of Park(ing) Day: Igloos.















9 Comments »
Comment posted September 18, 2009 @ 3:20 pm
I suppose then the harried good people trying to find a parking space are allowed to go park on the green at Lake Harriet?
What a dose of pointless idiocy and youthful self-righteousness this is. And if looking at a bunch of self-absorbed, underemployed hipsters is to be seen as “injecting wonder” into the urban landscape, well, I think I’d be better off in Mumbai.
Comment posted September 18, 2009 @ 4:43 pm
Yeah, those douchey St. Paul City Hall hipsters! Gah!
Comment posted September 19, 2009 @ 4:46 pm
Whoa there, Anonymous. That’s a lot of animosity towards a relatively innocuous act of performance art. While I do agree that Park(ing) Day might be more relevant in cities that suffer from a real lack of green space (which, I believe, downtown Minneapolis does not), I think that any attempt to call us away from our usual downtown routine is not a bad thing. Okay, so maybe their efforts would be better spent lobbying for community spaces in parts of the city where they are actually needed, true — but those “harried good people” looking for parking spaces at Lake Harriet or (in this case) the North Loop, maybe they should try other means of transportation? We have some of the best urban bike trails in the country, and a darn good mass transit system to boot. If anything, Park(ing) Day should remind us that the expectation of abundant parking everywhere we go is a purely American expectation — less room taken up by cars and SUV’s means more room for public spaces that truly enhance our city.
Comment posted September 19, 2009 @ 11:16 pm
Here are a few photos of New Haven’s 3 spaces:
http://downtownnewhaven.blogspot.com/2009/09/new-haveners-embrace-sustainability.html
Comment posted September 21, 2009 @ 10:29 am
A nice reply to Anonymous: http://greatdivide.typepad.com/across_the_great_divide/2009/09/parking-where-some-quarters-are-better-than-others.html
Comment posted September 24, 2009 @ 11:22 am
Wow, Annoymous. Does parking mean THAT much to you? There was a total of ten PARK(ing) Day spaces in the Twin Cities. If you don’t like it, I’m absolutely POSITIVE you can find another spot. Lighten up and have some fun.
Comment posted September 24, 2009 @ 5:22 pm
Paul, the music school there on the corner of N. 3rd and Washington is IPR (Institute of Production and Recording) not IBR.
It’s my Alma mater!
Looks like fun – I wish I could’ve come. I could’ve brought a garden fountain!
-Adam
Comment posted September 24, 2009 @ 7:46 pm
Thanks, Adam. I fixed it (in all three places: ugh).
Comment posted September 29, 2009 @ 10:49 am
If not for the killing of the plants (the sod), this would have been a wonderful experience.
Killing is killing whether it is a human, an animal, or a plant. While we need to toletate some death of life as a part of surviving, this was a wanton destruction of life that could have been avoided.
Shame on you!
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