March 19, 2021 FridayMusings is your source for what we love about Livonia
Livonia Parks help define hometown quality of life
Two early pioneers in defining our Livonia Parks for future generations
John Dufour’s career spanned more than 40 years of service to the cities of Dearborn and Livonia. After serving in World War II, he returned to begin his career with the City of Dearborn where he worked in various supervisory roles. In 1963, John became Superintendent of Parks and Recreation in Livonia and began his 16-year journey to build a strong parks and recreation department.

Under John’s guidance and partnership with various community leaders, Livonia’s recreation department grew from a relatively handful of amenities to a system comprised of 60 parks by 1979. This incredible growth was aided by the passage of a $4.4 million bond issue in 1964.

The bond funding, coupled with John’s vision and success in securing state and federal grants, led to the purchase and creation of various amenities, including the Eddie Edgar and Decon-Aire arenas; Whispering Willows and Idyl Wyld golf courses; Clement Circle, Botsford, and Shelden Park pools; and the Greenmead Historical Site. More than 40 tennis courts were constructed during John’s tenure, and he oversaw the development of many of the parks that residents enjoy today, including Rotary and Bicentennial Park. Dufour was a strong advocate for building community alliances in order to serve the fast-growing community.

In the early 70’s more than 25,000 youth and adults were involved in athletic programs sponsored or cosponsored by the department, and clubs were formed for all age groups.

John also found time to be an active member of the Optimist Club and the Livonia Anniversary Committee.

John believed in building strong parks and recreation department with a foundation based on quality amenities and programs.
Ronald (Ron) Reinke began his career as a seasonal employee for the Saginaw Parks and Recreation Department and then became Facilities Manager upon completion of his college degree. He moved on to become Assistant Superintendent and then Superintendent for Livonia Parks and Recreation, a position he held for 27 years.

Ron was instrumental in relighting all of Livonia’s baseball and softball diamonds and rebuilding all of Livonia’s parks. He also oversaw the acquisition and development of Idle Wyld Golf Course and was part of the team that passed a Charter Amendment recreation millage in Livonia. The millage provides a permanent source of funding for Parks and Recreation in the community. The immediate effect of the millage was an addition to the ice arena; addition and renovation of the Senior Center; and completion of the city’s park system renovations.

Later the millage provided for the construction of a new Community Center in 2003 which still has a “wow” factor when you walk inside the doors. Establishing cooperative relationships with other agencies for the common good was a key accomplishment for Reinke. He built a strategic partnership with the Livonia Hockey Association (for the operation of the ice arena), and with public schools and other community groups. A

Ron was a member of the Livonia Community Education Council; Anniversary Committee Board of Directors; Optimist Club; YMCA Board of Directors; as well as the Detroit Metropolitan YMCA Facilities Improvement Committee.
Eleven Principles for Creating
Great Community Places
This article comes from information provided by Project for Public Spaces, a cross-disciplinary team that shares a passion for public spaces. I wish the ideas were mine but I am borrowing them to share with you.

Effective public spaces are extremely difficult to accomplish because their complexity is rarely understood. As William (Holly) Whyte said, "It's hard to design a space that will not attract people. What is remarkable is how often this has been accomplished."

In the 1999 book How to Turn a Place Around, 11 key elements were identified in transforming public spaces into vibrant community places, whether they're parks, plazas, streets, or in Livonia's case the myriad of outdoor parks and historic venues. The elements of placemaking, borrowed from the book and not the concepts of the typewriter include:

The Community is the Expert
The important starting point in developing a concept for any public space is to identify the talents and assets within the community. In any community, there are people who can provide a historical perspective, valuable insights into how the area functions, and an understanding of the critical issues and what is meaningful to people.

Create a Place, Not a Design
If our goal is to create a place a design will not be enough. To make an under-performing space into a vital "place," physical elements must be introduced that would make people welcome and comfortable, such as seating and new landscaping, and also through "management" changes in the pedestrian circulation pattern and by developing more effective relationships between the activities going on in the public spaces. The goal is to create a place that has both a strong sense of community and a comfortable image.

Look for Partners
Partners are critical to the future success and image of a public space improvement project. Whether you want partners at the beginning to plan for the project or you want to brainstorm and develop scenarios with a dozen partners who might participate in the future, they are invaluable in providing support and getting a project off the ground. They can be local institutions, museums, schools, and others.

You Can See a Lot Just By Observing
We can all learn a great deal from others' successes and failures. By looking at how people are using (or not using) public spaces and finding out what they like and don't like about them, it is possible to assess what makes them work or not work.

Have a Vision
Essential to a vision for any public space is an idea of what kinds of activities might be happening in the space, a view that space should be comfortable and have a good image, and that it should be an important place where people want to be.

Start with the Petunias: Lighter, Quicker, Cheaper
The complexity of public spaces is such that you cannot expect to do everything right initially. The best spaces experiment with short-term improvements that can be tested and refined over many years!

Triangulate
"Triangulation is the process by which some external stimulus provides a linkage between people and prompts strangers to talk to other strangers as if they knew each other". In a public space, the choice and arrangement of different elements in relation to each other can put the triangulation process in motion. For example, if a bench, a wastebasket, and a telephone are placed with no connection to each other, each may receive a very limited use, but when they are arranged together along with other amenities such as a coffee cart, they will naturally bring people together (or triangulate!).

They Always Say "It Can't Be Done"
One of Yogi Berra's great sayings is "If they say it can't be done, it doesn't always work out that way," and we have found it to be appropriate for our work as well. Creating good public spaces is inevitably about encountering obstacles because no one in either the public or private sectors has the job or responsibility to "create places." Starting with small-scale community-nurturing improvements can demonstrate the importance of "places" and help to overcome obstacles.

Form Supports Function
The input from the community and potential partners, the understanding of how other spaces function, the experimentation, and overcoming the obstacles and naysayers provide the concept for the space.

Money Is Not the Issue
This statement can apply in a number of ways. For example, once you've put in the basic infrastructure of the public spaces, the elements that are added that will make it work (e.g., vendors, cafes, flowers, and seating) will not be expensive. In addition, if the community and other partners are involved in programming and other activities, this can also reduce costs. More important is that by following these steps, people will have so much enthusiasm for the project that the cost is viewed much more broadly and consequently as not significant when compared with the benefits.

You Are Never Finished
By nature good public spaces that respond to the needs, opinions and the ongoing changes of the community require attention. Being open to the need for change and having the management flexibility to enact that change is what builds great public spaces and great cities and towns.