MjolnirMan
Active Member
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2016
- Messages
- 296
- Reaction score
- 658
Yes. The previous iteration of the plaza had a large, primary section of lawn with the paths bordered on 2 sides by rows of trees and on one by flower planters. The new version has a smaller patch right in front of Trinity and nothing else (ignore in the render where they deceptively color mulch planters a shade of green). The only buffer from the paths is a strip of mulch on the St. James side and the scale is, what, a quarter of the old one?I showed up with major questions about the hardscape, but what proved to be most perplexing was the grass lawn and how literally NOBODY was using it. I dare any of you to go through all 30 of my photos and find even ONE person on it in any capacity, and no I’m not being selective with my shots and I was there for a solid 30 minutes
I wonder how much the midday sun is to blame? Is it too small to be inviting to sunbathers or picnic-ers? Too deferential to Trinity Church? Too pretty to get its hair mussed up?
On the old lawn, you could walk over, plop down, and feel like you've got some buffer in an oasis. In the new version, people are walking around on all sides constantly, leaving you feeling exposed. In one of your pictures, a red pickup truck is parked feet from where the "lawn" starts. It's uninviting and psychologically unpleasant.
The "grove" of tables under the trees looks nice and inviting, and there are a few people sitting on the bench wall. But I'd also like to point out that nobody is engaging with the hardscape when there's not a farmer's market on it - they're treating it as a super-wide pathway. It's a liminal space. So the new design has ruined the "urban lawn" effect, and 99% of the time when there aren't heavy trucks on the hardscape, that part of the plaza is effectively unusable for anything but walking through.