Newcomer queer youth tour of the gay village in TorontoNext »
In front of Nellie McClung's house in Winnipeg.Next »
Toronto - Mapping queer history on Yonge St.Next »
Jane's Walk in Phoenix - phot by David SBNext »
Windsor's Walkerville neighbourhood.Next »
Walking past Ambrosi Printers in Regina - photo by Laura Pfeifer.Next »
Some tour guides for "Growing up around Jane and Wilson" in Toronto - photo by Connie Tsang.Next »
Jungle Jaunt tour guides in Toronto's Lawrence Heights neighbourhood. Next »
St. Christopher House invites Toronto to join them for a Jane's Walk on Queen St. W. - photo by Bruce Ward.Next »
Ontario MP Cheri Di Novo tours her n-hood in downtown TorontoNext »
Mount Dennis in Toronto - photo by Connie Tsang.Next »
How to use a playground, according to the Jane and Finch tour guides in Toronto - photo by Connie Tsang.Next »
Kipling Tour in Toronto - photo by Kevin Murray.Next »
Snow is no deterent to Winnipeg Jane's walkers in 2008.Next »
Toronto: North Dovercourt train tracks - photo by Jörg Hippo Thomsen.Next »
Toronto - Urban designer Ken Greenberg in the West Donlands.Next »
Jane's Walkers in Mumbai, India. Next »
Vancouver - Public art tour. Photo by Neil Monckton.Next »
Jane's Walk Wordle.Next »
Thornbury - Devoted and drenched walkers.Next »
Toronto - The Hidden City tour of CAMH and Queen Street West.Next »
Toronto's Mayor Miller with two avid walkers in ScarboroughNext »
Jane's Walking in Regina.Next »
Walking the Tower Renewal site in North Kipling, Toronto - photo by Kevin Murray.Next »
Tour guide Lisa Pasold reveals secrets and lies in Beaconsfield in Toronto - photo by Bremner Duthie.Next »
Peeking through the gate during a Jane's Walk in Salt Lake City - photo by Nate Currey.Next »
CORE walk guides take a dance break in downtown Toronto.Next »
Jane Jacobs book display at the Maria A. Shchuka Toronto Public Library- photo by Kevin Murray.Next »
The Saddledome on display on a Calgary Jane's Walk in 2008.Next »
Jane's Walk picked up the pace and jogged this year in Toronto.Next »
Showing off Jane's Walk pride in New Orleans - photo by Sandra Morris.Next »
Rebecca Zelewicz and Adam Benarzi entertain the crowd in Thornhill. Photo by Martin Smith.Next »
Jane's Walkers in New Orlean - photo by Sandra Morris.Next »
Who needs a car when you can walk, meet your neighbours and talk in Dorset Park, Scarborough.Next »
Dog's eye view of North Dovercourt in Toronto - photo by Jörg Hippo Thomsen.Next »
Toronto - A tour of proposed bike path starting at the Gladstone Hotel.Next »
Walking along the Seton Ravine in Toronto - photo by Janet Malownay.Next »
Walking along the Red River in Winnipeg.Next »
Toronto - U. of Toronto geographer and walkability researcher Paul Hess.Next »
Jane's Walk tour guides in Toronto's gay village.Next »
Jane's walkers welcomed in Guelph subdivision.Next »
Chai break in Mumbai, India.Next »
Following the Leqleqi Portage in Vancouver.Next »
The great grocery story debate in St. James Town, Toronto - photo by John Caffrey.Next »
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Jane Jacobs (1916-2006) was an urbanist and activist whose writings championed a fresh, community-based approach to city building. She had no formal training as a planner, and yet her 1961 treatise, The Death and Life of Great American Cities, introduced ground-breaking ideas about how cities function, evolve and fail that now seem like common sense to generations of architects, planners, politicians and activists.
Jacobs saw cities as ecosystems that had their own logic and dynamism which would change over time according to how they were used. With a keen eye for detail, she wrote eloquently about sidewalks, parks, retail design and self-organization. She promoted higher density in cities, short blocks, local economies and mixed uses. Jacobs helped derail the car-centred approach to urban planning in both New York and Toronto, invigorating neighbourhood activism by helping stop the expansion of expressways and roads. She lived in Greenwich Village for decades, then moved to Toronto in 1968 where she continued her work and writing on urbanism, economies and social issues until her death in April 2006.
A firm believer in the importance of local residents having input on how their neighbourhoods develop, Jacobs encouraged people to familiarize themselves with the places where they live, work and play with words like these:
Jane's Walk 2008