Rebar: PARK(ing)

posted by Scott Beale on Monday, December 19th, 2005
PARK(ing)

San Francisco based art collective Rebar decided to take the concept of a parking spot to the next level. On November 16th they installed an actual park in a parking space in downtown San Francisco for their project PARK(ing), “a temporary urban park”. People enjoying the park had to feed the parking meter (ie. pay the rent) in order to keep the park open.

PARK(ing) is an investigation into reprogramming a typical unit of private vehicular space by leasing a metered parking spot for public recreational activity.

We identified a site in an area of downtown San Francisco that is underserved by public outdoor space and is in an ideal, sunny location between the hours of noon and 2 p.m. There we installed a small, temporary public park that provided nature, seating, and shade.

Our goal was to transform a parking spot into a PARK(ing) space, thereby temporarily expanding the public realm and improving the quality of urban human habitat, at least until the meter ran out.

By our calculations, we provided an additional 24,000 square-foot-minutes of public open space that Wednesday afternoon.

Special thanks to Jason Laskodi for the tip on this awesome urban prank (he came across it on kottke.org)

Related Posts:

PARK(ing) Day 2006

PARK(ing) Day 2007, Turning Parking Spaces Into Parks

Meter Pops

You Park Like An Asshole

PARK(ing) Day at Ritual Coffee Roasters

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filed under: Art, Pranks, San Francisco

this blog post was written by Scott Beale on Monday, December 19th, 2005


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