![]() ![]() It's wise not to "over-institutionalize" it, he added. People have to bring their own towels and umbrellas, but it's an open space and as long as we aren't building cafes or cabanas, it's an equitable kind of place," he said.Ī good start would be to post signs telling people they're using the property at their own risk, he suggested. What cities do for beaches is post signage, provide access and collect litter. "Beaches have relatively little infrastructure, so there's not much that can cause serious damage, because there aren't a lot of supports for that activity. "For families, it's bigger than having a new arena."Ī decline in clean, algae-free lakes around the Edmonton area makes it especially attractive, and as an amenity that would otherwise cost tens of millions of dollars to construct, it can, at least initially, be policed minimally, Shields believes. "A beach reorients how we think of the city around a new centre point-and our kids will make sure we know it every summer," he said. ![]() ![]() The accidental beach, known more formally as Cloverdale Beach, can do the same here, he thinks. In terms of kickstarting development and changing the image of the city, it was worth hundreds of millions of dollars." "It was the centrepiece of a revitalization for them. It's as if Cancun came to us, and that's huge."Ī man-made beach developed in Brisbane, Australia-geographically similar to Edmonton but in the subtropics-brought a new vibe to their inner city, Shields said. "A beach is always a leisure space, always a vacation. It escapes the kind of established order for both the city and the river valley. People were able to use it, and it's a fantastic amenity. "We've got a beach that appears as a result of river currents where before, there was a mud flat. The silky piece of land on the river's south shore represents a sort of "free zone" for residents, said Shields, who studied the allure of Britain's Brighton Beach for his PhD. Caused by a construction berm that slowed the water, the pop-up beach delighted residents used to a river with a skimpy, mucky shoreline. The current beach formed unexpectedly while a new bridge was being built over the North Saskatchewan River in 2017. It also gets more people into the river valley and you see the city differently."Ĭity council's executive committee will meet tomorrow to debate whether and where to construct a permanent beach in the city. "It's one more thing to do in Edmonton and one more place to take the kids. "It's one of the things that's been missing," said Rob Shields of the U of A's City-Region Studies Centre. Edmonton's "accidental beach" should become a permanent part of the river valley, says a University of Alberta urban sociology expert. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |