Posts Tagged ‘Celebrating Dolores Park’

Undivided Affection

August 27th, 2010

Sometimes the most important attribute of a place is what it’s missing. In Dolores Park, one such invisible factor is its lack of barriers. Clearly, this improves the view, but it also has powerful effects on other aspects of park life.

If you spend a whole day, or a whole year, in the park, you’ll see how variable the usage is. In the morning, dogs run across vast fields that by the afternoon are covered with picnic blankets. Some days three or four bands or shows are simultaneously in action in their own nook, yet several times a year a sea of people covering the entire hillside is watching a movie or symphony or rock band or drag show. Where a bouncy castle is one day, a game of croquet or fetch or a birthday party piñata or a food kiosk or drum circle or slack line or studious sunbather will be the next.

This variety is only possible because the park is, for the most part, undivided space. The meadows and groves and hillsides flow into one another, split only by the 19th Street walkway. This lack of explicit differentiation lets people do what comes naturally, looking for either solitude or companionship or entertainment, and at every moment a near-optimal organization emerges. This allows a park covering merely two city blocks to feel much larger. If there are a lot of picnickers, the dogs consolidate uphill; if there are none, they roam. If there’s a band playing at one side and you don’t like the music, you can spread your blanket in a quieter area — no matter which side the band chose. And where there are differences, like a gentle slope or a shade tree, they help people find their own spots naturally, without imposed conventions like “all BBQs go here” or “all bands go there”.

This effect is unique in the city. Even Golden Gate Park comprises mostly divided groves and meadows; yet despite this small-park feel, some lawns are too big to find a friend without GPS coordinates. But while Dolores Park feels big, it’s actually small enough to walk an entire circuit in 15 minutes. And with line of sight mostly unobstructed, you can discover with a glance if there’s something cool happening not too far away.

Necessary and exciting improvements are on their way. Let’s hope that in improving this shared space we don’t lose the subtleties that make it worth improving.

Virtual Dolores

August 5th, 2010

Where’s my avatar?

magicmarker on paper by Todd Berman.
Zoom.it thingy by Microsoft
“It sort of feels more like the park than an actual picture of the park”- MissionMission.

Lemonade Stand Shut Down

July 26th, 2010
Lemonade Stand Shutdown

Cops put kibosh on micro-entrepreneur.

Here is the scene.  The concert by the San Francisco Symphony on Sunday was beset by a plague of jangly Mexican ice cream vendors. We are talking at least 20 cow bells times six drowning out the string section. Cut to SFPD to the rescue. Unfortunately these young entrepreneurs on the move were caught up in the sweep. SF Weekly’s, Joe Eskenazi got  the full spin from the cops. Thanks J0e. And a special thank you to Mission Local and Mission Mission for posting our pics.

SF Symphony Takes to the Stage

July 25th, 2010

And the sun comes out.

Independence Weekend Finale

July 1st, 2010
Let’s go out with a bang!  The DPW team will be coordinating with the San Francisco Mime Troupe to help clean up after the Troupe’s final performance of the Independence Day Weekend, Monday, July 5.  We have been working with Rec and Park and other major event producers to see what can be done to lower the impact these events are having on our park. And have scheduled four clean-up events in the next couple of months, July 25 we will be out after the SF Symphony, August 8, the Sunday after SF Film Night in the Park and again on August 29. By coming out and helping event producers we hope to learn from each other. SF Mime Troupe has been bringing their unique form of theater to our city’s parks for 50 years and can now safely be declared experts in producing shows in our parks. Dolores Park Works is slowly becoming experts in what we need to preserve our unique park. Let’s do this together and have some fun with it!
We need wonderful volunteers – like you – to help keep Dolores looking her best!  Join your the Dolores Park Works team, SF Mime Troupe, your friends and neighbors, in a park clean up and picnic.  Meet up at our information table behind the tennis courts, near 18th street and Dolores, 3pm.  And bring some picnic snacks to share!  If you plan to attend, please RSVP here.
The San Francisco Mime Troupe will be performing in Dolores all this weekend July 3, 4 and 5, starting at 2pm. Throughout this Summer, the Troupe continues to play parks around the Bay area for free and will return to Dolores on Labor Day weekend for three more shows.