So, yeah. Congratulations.
But there it is. I started this blog 10 years ago while I was working a pair of part-time jobs and starting to get interested in urban design and local politics. At the time, it looked different, more of a collection of links with quick commentary than anything else. Much like Twitter today, it was a place to catalog and collect information, as well as a middling exchange of ideas.
The blog tapered off in the early years as I lost and gained interest, especially once I got involved with other things (e.g. graduate school, staring at the cat). But then, when the
Multiple venues
If this blog is worse than it used to be, it’s a victim of its own success. I’m writing now for so many places that it can be difficult to keep track of tone. At Minnpost, I’m trying to write straight-up journalism where I call sources and explore a question about our cities. At streets.mn, I’m trying to write data-supported essays that make arguments about policy. On Twitter, I’m trying to forward interesting articles and points of information, gently troll and/or converse, and amuse myself.
That leaves this blog as a place to curate my mostly crappy street photography, re-blog the Highland Villager, make announcements, and post my most personal and/or opinionated writing. That’s how I try to sort it out in my head, anyway. Each of these venues has a distinct audience and format, and I hope both of us can keep it all straight.
[An early picture from 10 years ago. I still find joy in this.] |
Experiencing our city’s sidewalks aren’t just about getting mad at cars out of control. If it were, there’s be no point, no life left in it.
Rather, city sidewalks are most often alive with joy if you're able to notice it. Walking and biking through Saint Paul and Minneapolis brings discovery, adventure, comfort, solitude, serendipity. Sidewalks are beautiful, one of the few reliable things that bring us closer as strangers.
That’s a message that risks getting lost in the details of any given struggle for equity, but it’s important to remember the joy of sidewalks. I promise to try.
Hopes for the Future
I’m hoping to rekindle this site as a place for sharing positive stories, things like the cast of public characters, unusual everyday doorways, psychogeograhic patterns, and wonder. I’m hoping also to share some of my completed PhD research on the different kinds of urban bicycling and why they matter. And finally, I’m hoping to publish and distribute more Saint Paul flags and other curiosities that I create or come across. Stay tuned.
This is all to say, thanks for reading this bit of internet flotsam. If you can support this decidedly un-lucrative effort with a donation, I’d really appreciate it and will send you a small token of gratitude.
Who knows what the next ten years will bring?
[My favorite of my sidewalk photos.] |
Keep on keeping on, Bill.
ReplyDeleteIt was the 35W bridge.
ReplyDeleteof course it was. i need to get out more.
ReplyDelete