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In Dallas, a Community Transforms a Street

The people at Bike
Friendly Oak Cliff
tipped us off to this video about a truly
inspirational event that happened in the Oak Cliff section of Dallas a
couple of weeks ago.

With about a thousand bucks and some elbow grease, neighborhood
residents transformed a rundown city block for two days, creating a
vibrant streetscape — a truly complete street. They painted a cycle
track, opened a pop-up café in an empty storefront, put up some outdoor
seating and calmed traffic. It’s a brilliant example of how, with a
minimal amount of money and a full commitment from the community, places
can be transformed quite literally overnight, revealing a wealth of
untapped economic and social potential.

The event has gotten a lot of positive feedback from city officials,
among others, according to Bike Friendly Oak Cliff:

Immediately after the project, Dallas transportation staff have begun
looking at making many of the changes permanent. Go Oak Cliff is being asked to
recreate the Better Block in two other cities in Texas to help showcase
the potential for revitalizing their respective areas, and Congress for New Urbanism will feature
the event at their 18th annual
exposition
in Atlanta.

In the video above, organizer Jason Roberts sums it up:

We’ve got the first complete street in Dallas…. It didn’t cost
millions of dollars. We didn’t have to hire consultants from other
faraway places to make this happen. It took us a day. And all we did was
slow the street down. We made room for everybody. For cars, for people,
for bicyclists.… We’ve changed the psychology of the street.

Anyone else out there want to try something similar? We’re sure the
folks down in Dallas would love to help out. Let us know your thoughts
in the comments.

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