For Immediate Release: 6th Annual SASKATOON JANE’S WALK: Meet Your City! May 1 – 3, 2015 Jane’s Walk is a series of neighbourhood walking tours that put people in touch with their environment and with each other, by bridging social and geographic gaps and creating a space for cities to discover themselves. Since its inception in 2007, Jane’s Walk has happened in cities across North America, and is growing internationally. Each year on the weekend nearest her birthday, Jane’s Walk honours the legacy and ideas of urban activist and writer Jane Jacobs — who championed the interests of local residents and pedestrians over a car-centred approach to community planning. All Jane’s Walk tours are given and taken for free. The walks are led by anyone who has an interest in the neighbourhoods where they live, work or hang out. For 2015, we’re excited to present 14 Jane’s Walks throughout the city! Join us for the Jane's Walk kickoff, “Home Sweet Home?” Friday, May 1st, 2015 at 7:00 pm. A member from Saskatoon Fire & Protective Services, a former Saskatoon Police Service officer and community advocates will guide you through a Saskatoon core neighbourhood on a journey and discussion of housing dilapidation and rejuvenation. Please find descriptions of all 14 walks attached. Get the full, up-to-date list of walks, with all the details, at: www.janeswalk.org www.facebook.com/JanesWalkSaskatoon www.SaskatoonJanesWalk.blogspot.ca @janeswalksktoon [email protected] Interviews and more information: Cathy Watts (306) 664-3908 Jane’s Walk Saskatoon Page 1 2015 Jane’s Walk Kick-Off Event: Home Sweet Home? Led By: Tina Frerichs Description: Friday, May 1st at 7:00pm, a member from Saskatoon Fire & Protective Services, a former Saskatoon Police Service officer and community advocates will guide you through a Saskatoon core neighbourhood on a journey & discussion of housing dilapidation and rejuvenation. Homo Hike: An Historical Downtown Walking Tour Led By: Joe Wickenhauser Description: Saskatoon has long been one of Canada’s leading centres for activism around gender and sexual diversity. Hear these public and personal stories come to life on this fun, interactive tour. Enjoy a leisurely walk as local storytellers chart the changing landscape of LGBTQ lives and activism in the city of bridges. Saskatoon’s New Infill Requirements Led By: Alan Wallace & Paula Kotasek-Toth Description: This walk will show examples of desirable and undesirable infill development within a historic core neighbourhood, and describe the effect of the city’s proposed new infill regulations. We’ll look at a typical block in Varsity View, which has been subject to a lot of infill development. Caswell Bus Barns: Hub of Creativity Led By: Craig Campbell & Charles Olfert Description: We will tour both outside and inside the Caswell Hill Bus Barns while presenting an overview of many possible uses for the buildings and the property. The ecological and cultural history of the Meewasin valley Led By: Anonymous Description: The ecological and cultural history of the Meewasin valley, with a focus on the changing natural environment. Broadway - where it all began! Led By: Peggy Sarjeant Description: A stroll along Saskatoon’s earliest main street with a dip into its alleyways and side streets, looking at its architectural history and listening to stories of times gone by. Age-Friendly: How does Saskatoon measure up? Led By: Candace Skrapek Description: Candace Skrapek, the co-chair of the Saskatoon Council on Aging Age-Friendly Initiative, will lead a walk through just a few streets downtown and discuss "walkability" and other ideas about how our city measures up as age-friendly. Jane’s Walk Saskatoon Page 2 Psycho Geography – An ephemeral view of Saskatoon’s Urban Fabric Led By: Shawn Storry Description: Psychogeography is a mid-century modern concept becoming more commonly identified as a sub-genre situationist movement. Situationists provide an alternate view, concept, and way to move throughout the city – sometimes referred to as wayfinding. The Heart of the City... an historic walking tour of downtown Saskatoon Led By: Alan Morton Description: Join us for an interesting, and informative, walking tour featuring some of Saskatoon’s iconic historical sites. Learn about the stories, and the little-known facts behind them, plus their significance and social impact, on the development of our city. President Murray Park Led By: Stan Shadick Description: We’ll walk through this park listening and looking for any small songbirds that are present. We may see some finches, thrushes or nuthatches, chickadees and early migrant warblers. Photo walk in downtown Saskatoon Led By: Branimir Gjetvaj Description: Explore the familiar scene of Saskatoon downtown core with fresh eyes, take a few pictures and exercise your creative side. Join a group of like-minded shutterbugs and find out if you could see (and photograph) what others missed. Saskatoon’s North Downtown: Challenges and Opportunities Led By: Samuel Lock Description: The City’s master plan for the area aims to reconnect the city, create a green network and create homes for to up to 7600 people. We will explore the area through the lens of this master plan, identify the locations of key elements of the plan, and attempt to better understand the scale and potential of the land. AAA! Suburbs… What Are You Afraid Of? Led By: Pam Brotzel Description: Saskatoon is growing! The goal is to grow in a sustainable manner; a balance between infill and greenfield development. This walk will provide real facts about population growth and infill development, and discuss neighbourhood design, what works and what doesn’t. Beyond the repetitive housing design and the immature trees, new neighbourhoods like Stonebridge do form communities with character and a sense of place. Stonebridge: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly Led By: Paul Hanley Description: See how the worst features of urban design—cars, concrete, and consumption—live on in this neighbourhood as if there were no tomorrow, as if everything we have learned about climate change, ecological footprint, overconsumption and convivial cities had been totally ignored (almost). Jane’s Walk Saskatoon Page 3
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