If today’s Atlanta were a person, it would wear a whistle around its neck and sport a coach’s white sneakers. It would tell Atlantans to go take a lap.
Atlanta, like a significant number of America’s major citiesand modest towns, is going to unprecedented lengths so that its citizenry will open their front doors, enjoy the breeze and greenery, and go break a sweat. This is most clearly illustratedby the city'simpressive, and ultimately massive, —a 14-foot-wide, 22-mile-long paved recreational paththat, when completed in 2030, will surround the entire city core in a pear-shaped loop. The projectisemblematic of what is now a national movement to thoroughly knit the outdoors and nature into a town'sconcrete and asphalt.
“Being in your car multiple hours per day is not good,” says Rob Brawner, executive director of theAtlanta BeltLine Partnership, a nonprofit establishedin 2005 with the goal ofraisingcapital and growingcivic support for the project. “We think people have an innate desire to get outside.”
The early success of the BeltLine—largely a collection of converted railway corridors—has inspired themajor metroareato get healthy.In 2015, well over a million people used the BeltLine’s already completed (but still modest) 2.25-mile Eastside Trail by foot, bicycle, and scooter. Alongside the path, there’s a skate parkand regular opportunities to take boot camp, yoga, and aerobics classes. Whenthe $4.8 billion BeltLineis finished, itwill connect 45 Atlanta neighborhoods and offer access to approximately 2,000 acres of adjacent parkland. TheNew York Times the project“potentially transformative.”
The nationwide trend of cities and municipalities prioritizing natural places to play is more than coincidental or even intentional. It’s imperative.
“The BeltLinewill provide fundamental changes to how people live,” says Brawner. “Biking to school. Walking to stores.”
Atlanta isn't alone. Other cities, both small and large,are embarking on similar initiatives. Groundbreaking for Miami’s proposed10-mile linear park—which will occupy currently unused land beneath the city’s elevated Metrorail—will likely happen next year. New York City’s partially built Freshkills Park, on Staten Island, was previously the world’s biggest landfill, and will measure 2,200 acres when completed in 2036.And recently, thetiny city of Whitefish, Montana (year-round population: 6,500), began construction on a massive55-mile trail built largely by and for its inhabitants. FromSeattleto Santa Fe, Bozeman toD.C.,you’ll find equally ambitious and awesome projects. The nationwide trend of cities and municipalities prioritizing natural places to play is more than coincidental or even intentional. It’s imperative.
Cities are booming. According to an conducted this year by Washington D.C.’s George Washington School of Business, the nation’s 30 largest U.S. citieshost 46 percent of the nation’s population and generate 54 percent of America’s gross domestic product. Millennials are pouring into urban centers, which are enjoying rental-rate premiums 90 percent higher than their suburban counterparts. The modern-day dilemma for city governments and planners doesn’t concern mass exodus to the ‘burbs. Instead, cities want to keep people from leaving for other cities. One way to add appeal:building kick-ass parks and trails.
“We’re in the biggest period of park expansion and development since the WPA [Works Progress Administration] era of the 1930s,” says conservationist Adrian Benepe, director of city park development for the Trust for Public Land. “Cities are competing to see who can build the biggest,the best.”
The young workforce still wants some of whatthey might have grown up with in the suburbs,like green space and places to ride bikes,says Benepe, who previously served as acommissioner of New York City’s Department of Parks & Recreation. “Millennials want to have the art and culture of a city, and they want suburban amenities like soccer fields and extended paths,” he says. “So city governments have come to understand that quality of life is in part now defined by parks and recreational facilities.”
Cities want to keep people from leaving forother cities. One way to add appeal? Build kick-ass parks and trails.
Itcan also mean improved access to inner cities and downtown areas, saysBrawnerof the AtlantaBeltLinePartnership. “More diverse transportation solutions are increasingly critical.”
Bike friendliness in particular has become important to cities. In the last several years, huge metros—including Washington D.C., Fort Lauderdale, New York City, and Seattle—have championed a plan called“,”a Swedish concept developed in the 1990sstating that every single traffic-related death (cyclists and otherwise) is preventable if governments utilizesmartpolicy and urban planning. The high-minded notion, which has been implemented in variousEuropean countries for decades,has already led to better and safer city riding in America.
Portland, Oregon,features a stretch of fledgling, slightly raised bike paths to better define boundaries between car and bike lanes; Chicago and Washington D.C. place curbs and islands between motor vehicles and cyclists; and Denver places automobile parking spaces between riders and other traffic. Earlier this year, New York City’s Pulaski Bridge, which runs between Brooklyn and Queens, unveiled bike lanes separated from cars via concrete barrier.
And cities take pride in caring for their active inhabitants. Minneapolis brags about having “America’s first bicycle freeway.” Portlandgives city cyclists a phone number to call for bike-route maintenance and fixes. And New Yorkrecently boasted that two years after thelaunch of its ownVision Zero,2015 was the safest year in the city's history.
To implement plans that people will actually use, many city planners are turning to social media, which has recently played an integral role inhelpingshape the design of cities and how weinteract with them.In 2014, Strava—the social-networking app that tracks and captures the GPS data of its members’ eight-million-plus weekly swims, bike rides, and runs—created a service called . Metro harnesses and anonymizesactivity data, and then sells it to cities and government organizationsinterested in gleaning information about how their cyclists and pedestrians mesh with urban infrastructure. In Strava Metro'stwo years of existence, more than 85 municipalities and groupshave used it.
“We have a wide range of clients—from smaller places like Oakville, Ontario, to theFlorida Department of Transportation,” says Strava Metro spokesperson Brian Devaney.
In 2014, Brisbane, Australia (population: twomillion), employedStrava Metro to help it evolve existing bike routes as well as develop new ones. Brisbane is the capital of Australia’s northeastern state of Queensland, which in the last 13 years has spent over $1 billion building cycling infrastructure to, among other reasons,battleboth carbon emissions and the state population’s high rate of obesity.
Cities take pride in caring for their active inhabitants
Metro proved that city planners were on the righttrack.In September 2015, workers completed a new section of Brisbane’sto redirect cyclists away from traffic signals anddangerouscommercial districts.The nearly half-mile path, which travels under a six-lane highway and took about six months to finish, spurred more people to get on their bikes.Soon after the new stretch of pavement opened, Stravashowed thatrides within a one-kilometer radius of the added bikeway increased by 23 percent. Beyond the one-kilometer radius to the west, participation jumped 57 percent.
“More and more cities are using Metro data to understand how the behavior of cyclists and pedestrians change,” says Devaney, who notes that his company and its clients are able tocorrelatesome data—every Strava trip represents justtwo-to-fivepercent of all similar rides taken. “You can change a component of the ecosystem and then follow the ripple effect ten or 15 blocks away,” he says.
Strava claims that nearly half of all the rides it captures in busier urban metro areas are commutes. Such valuable information means that in coming months and years, Strava Metro’s reach and influence on a city'scommuterswill likely only intensify.
But it isn’t just giant metro areas that are working to increase how active their residents are. “Towns that other people consider rural are definitely learning to better manage their public assets,” says the Trust for Public Land’s Benepe.
The modest city of Sandpoint, Idaho (population: 7,500) has a particularly rich tale around the notion of blended resources, citizenry, and fitness. Sandpoint, which is the largest city inside of sparsely populated Bonner County (40,500), faced two significant hurdles in making its residents more active: over one quarter of adult Idahoans are obese, and 15 percent of Bonner County residents live in poverty. While land conservationists were effectively preserving Bonner County’s open space in the name of wildlife corridors, forestry, and even recreation, there was one nagging problem—the locals weren’t using the resources.
“We decided that if we can’t find ways to connect people to nature and land, we may as well not be doing land protection,” says Eric Grace, executive director for Sandpoint’s nonprofit Kaniksu Land Trust. “No use in birdwatching if 99 percent of the people here don’t watch birds.”
Civic leadersare realizing that a well-placed, well-intentioned sidewalkcan radically alter communities, public health, and people’s outlooks on life.
In September 2015, Grace networked his organization to work with seven local medical practitioners and 70 participants in a program called ParkRx, an initiative led by organizations including the National Recreation and Park Association and the National Park Service.ParkRxis its own kind of medicine: via the plan, doctors literally prescribe specific outdoor exercise to their patients. The initiative boosts fitness as well as appreciation for parks and open space, and has positively affected people in cities like Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Washington, D.C., and little Sandpoint, Idaho.
Grace’s organization initially contributed by simply steering a trickle of people toward the best places to exercise—like parks or trails found in tiny Dover, and Ponderay. But at the conclusion of the seven-month pilot program, the plan opened up to more local medical practitioners, and much of Bonner County’s citizenry. Local physicians prescribed a bigger caseload of patients to a couple-hundred yards of walking or jogging; or perhaps to 10,000 steps of running. The Kaniksu Land Trust became more involved, to the point that it has now touched the lives of hundreds of Sandpoint residents.
Grace says that he no longer takes living the active lifestyle for granted. His organization is in contact with local thrift stores for ParkRx patients who may need a workout jacket or pair of shoes, but don’t have the means to buy them new. He realizes that some ParkRx participants don’t have cars, or gas money, or that they can’t get to the open spaces because of work demands. Some also don’t have neighborhood sidewalks, which could help them to squeeze in their workouts.
“Imagine how eye-opening this has been to me. All my life I’ve been telling people to appreciate open space,” says Grace. “Now we’re working with Sandpoint to make better sidewalks. A land trust, and that’s what we’re asking for.”
Whether a city is tiny or enormous, civic leaders today are realizingthat a well-placed, well-intentioned sidewalk—be it a couple blocks in lengthor 22 miles around—can radically alter communities, public health, and people’s outlooks on life. The happy trend toward ever-greater urban parkland and escapes proves that you really never can have too many people, in too many urban spaces, who lust for some sunshine and a sweet and unfettered place to stretch one’s legs.
“I live in a BeltLine neighborhood,” says Rob Brawner, the executive director of the Atlanta BeltLine Partnership. “I’m one of those people who wants to walk around, too.”