[Parking lot pieta.] |
As Seinfeld proves, parking lots are only places of peace when we're not using them, forgotten behind hurried footsteps. At the endpoints of driving, parking lots can focus frustration to incredible intensities. Ramps transform into an endless and repetitive labyrinths. The design and evolution of modern machine storage architecture seems like Kafka's attempt at science fiction.
Meanwhile, surface lots are literally the least common denominator for urban land. Their size can grow to sublime proportions, lifeless oceans.
(Because they are so omnipresent, parking lots sometimes play host to surprising bits of life. Think of the massive pop-up farmer's market by the Unidale Mall, or the dilapidated taco truck that daily plants itself in a small corner lot on East 7th.)
- What: a guided bicycle tour of seven (7 ) parking lots of Saint Paul
- When: Saturday April 23rd, tour leaving promptly at 3:00 (approx. 2 hours)
- Where: Leaving from the parking lot in front of the Rainbow Foods, ending at the parking lot next to Mancini's Char House
- Who: Free and open to the public (But you are welcome to buy me a drink at Mancini's!)
- Why: Because it's there
Note: This will be a relaxed bicycle ride that prioritizes perception and conviviality over speed. Unless you're my brother, I promise not to "drop you."
[A particularly intense Saint Paul parking lot.] |
The tour will traverse about 8-miles of Saint Paul's streets, beginning at the parking lot nearest to death, the one fronting the Snelling and University strip malls. (This parking lot is, of course, the site of the city's impending soccer stadium.)
We'll then travel East along Charles Avenue towards downtown, stopping at a massive 1960s parking lot that offered groundbreaking design for its day (and still holds special legislative exempt status), a few parking lots that used to be parks, a parking lot that was the site of an embarrassing crime, the oldest multi-story "garage" in downtown Saint Paul (AFAIK), before sallying past some historically intriguing parking lots along West 7th Street.
The idea is to deliver scrutiny on the empty ubiquitous places that we so often deliberately ignore. Come along and, as the junior rabbi says of Saint Louis Park, "look at the parking lot."
But what are we looking at?
[Below: Four views of Saint Paul's Victory Ramp on Kellogg and 4th Street.]
During a tour, it is great to have parking lots available where people can leave their cars and enjoy their whole trips. Nice post
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Whether it is bicycle tour, finding a parking lot can save their time. People would be happy on finding a parking area for their vehicles.
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This is amazing article about Parking Lot.
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