Photo: Paul Chinn, The Chronicle
Artificial turf is installed in a park under construction in San Francisco, which claims to be the first city with a park near every home.
More and more research is showing that access to nature and urban parks improves not only quality of life but the health of city dwellers. Municipalities save, too, when they have healthier residents.
Recently San Francisco was able to claim the distinction of being first in the nation to offer a park 10 minutes from every home.
Lizzie Johnson reports at the San Francisco Chronicle, “In 10 minutes, you can load a TV episode on Netflix, check your mail waiting for BART or make an avocado toast. Now, you can add to that list: take a walk to the park.
“San Francisco is the first city in the nation to have every resident live within a 10-minute walk of a park or open space. The percentage is calculated by the Trust for Public Land, a nonprofit that facilitates the creation of parks and analyzes park systems for the 100 largest cities nationwide. …
“But don’t expect to see a small army of city workers and volunteers with stopwatches in hand counting their steps. The data were gathered using a complex geographic mapping program. The average person can walk a half-mile in about 10 minutes, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation, which counts even your two legs as a mode of transportation. The distance has to include sidewalks — crossing highways or skirting canals doesn’t count.
“ ‘We developed this as the gold standard,’ said Adrian Benepe, the Trust for Public Land’s director of city park development. ‘A 10-minute walk to a park is an important indicator of the livability of a city.’ …
“Criteria for the nonprofit’s annual ParkScore analysis also includes the number of individual parks, overall spending and facilities upkeep. …
“The city has spent $355 million in bond and general fund money over the past four years to purchase land, renovate dilapidated parks and improve open spaces. In 2012, voters passed the $195 million Clean and Safe Neighborhood Parks Bond to fix up neighborhood parks.
“Those measures made the difference in reaching the No. 1 spot, said Recreation and Park Department Director Phil Ginsburg.
“ ‘It speaks volumes about this city’s commitment to open space,’ he said. “It is the reflection of literally a century and a half of decisions regarding parks and open space.’ ”
It’s funny–when you live in a rural area, the goal seems to be a Dollar General store within 10 minutes of everyone! I like the park idea a lot better . . .
To be honest, I want both close by. Maybe not Dollar General, but shops, the library, town hall, the hospital … and parks. I love that most of my adult life I’ve lived in walkable communities that have all that. Well, I would drive to the hospital, but it’s 5 minutes.
I agree about walking/biking everywhere if possible. Not a big fan of artificial turf — at some point I fear someone is going to study the health effects of breathing in (and rolling around on) whatever off-gasses from artificial turf (which is some form of plastic, right?) and discover that we have been changing/polluting the intricate chemistry of our children’s and our athlete’s bodies… Why have we stopped using good old grass and dirt, or wood chips, or sand?
Well, whaddya know? I raced to post that photo and didn’t even cotton on to the artificial turf. Thank you for being such a thoughtful reader. Sounds like the city was in too much of a hurry to be the first in the nation. Perhaps it will move to a more natural ground cover once enlightened San Franciscans point out the problem.