Newsletter: Get ready!๐ฅ People Over Parking: An Installation ๐ฅ 10/21
On Saturday, October 21st, we're doing something totally new as part of Open House New York Weekend. A free, annual festival, OHNY Weekend offers insider looks into hundreds of interesting and noteworthy places in NYC. And we have created our own noteworthy place that you can step inside for one day only.
Newsletter: HUGE news for NYC livability & housing ๐ What comes next?
Today the Department of City Planning and Mayor Adams made a historic announcement โ full, citywide elimination of parking mandates is included in the City of Yes Zoning for Housing Opportunity text amendment. This is huge, and something that Open Plans has been working on for years.
Newsletter: Sabina here!๐๐ฝ Let's talk SCHOOLS
To celebrate back-to-school season, our Schools Planner Sabina Sethi Unni took over the newsletter today to share her work creating safe space for young New Yorkers.
Newsletter: We went to Summer Streets with BP Mark Levine ๐
Summer Streets is on a roll! And Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine plans to keep the momentum going. This month, we met up with BP Levine on a balmy Harlem block to enjoy the car-free festival ourselves โ and we got some Q&A on camera.
Newsletter: Next steps for outdoor dining + our interns' brilliant work๐ก
It's official! New York City will permanently allow the curbspace in front of bars and restaurants to be used for outdoor seating โ at least for part of the year. On Thursday, August 3rd, the City Council approved a permanent Open Restaurants bill that operates from April through October.
Newsletter: Love outdoor dining? Help it pass! โ
The City Council is poised to vote on a bill to create a permanent Open Restaurants program, but we need your help to make sure it gets through. Contact your City Council Member today and tell them to vote yes to create a permanent outdoor dining program!
Newsletter: Reducing car dominance is climate survival
The planet has experienced record-high temperatures already this summer, and we're certainly feeling the heat in New York City. Personal vehicles are a major cause of climate change; if we hope to address this crisis, we must pursue sweeping changes to the way we design for and encourage driving.