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Ideas to Achieve the Full Potential of Washington's Parks and Open Space
Washington is a city of parks. With its many large and small neighborhood parks, schoolyards, formal downtown parks, stream valley corridors, forest preserves and green river banks of the Potomac and Anacostia, it is graced with more green space per person than any other U.S. city of its size. In addition, while known the world over for the symbolic power of the National Mall, parks and open space throughout Washington's neighborhoods have historic attributes and commemorative features that make them signature elements of the nation's capital. Although Washington's parks and open space are abundant and beloved, the quality and capacity of these spaces has not kept pace with the growing, changing, and sometimes conflicting needs of residents, workers, or millions of annual visitors. To help address this cooperatively, the National Park Service, the government of the District of Columbia and the National Capital Planning Commission formed the CapitalSpace partnership. Recognizing that planning and management efforts are currently underway to enhance the National Mall and parks along the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers, CapitalSpace is focused on other national and local parks in the neighborhoods throughout Washington.
Ideas to Achieve the Full Potential of Washington's Parks and Open Space
Washington is a city of parks. With its many large and small neighborhood parks, schoolyards, formal downtown parks, stream valley corridors, forest preserves and green river banks of the Potomac and Anacostia, it is graced with more green space per person than any other U.S. city of its size. In addition, while known the world over for the symbolic power of the National Mall, parks and open space throughout Washington's neighborhoods have historic attributes and commemorative features that make them signature elements of the nation's capital. Although Washington's parks and open space are abundant and beloved, the quality and capacity of these spaces has not kept pace with the growing, changing, and sometimes conflicting needs of residents, workers, or millions of annual visitors. To help address this cooperatively, the National Park Service, the government of the District of Columbia and the National Capital Planning Commission formed the CapitalSpace partnership. Recognizing that planning and management efforts are currently underway to enhance the National Mall and parks along the Potomac and Anacostia Rivers, CapitalSpace is focused on other national and local parks in the neighborhoods throughout Washington.
Ideas to Achieve the Full Potential of Washington's Parks and Open Space
2010
105 pages
Report
Keine Angabe
Englisch
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