2020
Safe in Public Space
Safe in Public Space is a multifaceted initiative that aims to broaden the definition of public safety to address new public health challenges presented by COVID as well as systemic inequities, and ensure that there is a shared social contract governing public space access and use.
How do we define public safety and for whom? Where are safety and accessibility at odds, and how can those conflicts lead to new creative solutions that reshape public space and give people the confidence to re-engage in the city without anxiety?
Through creative experiments on The Bentway’s physical and digital sites; images, ideas, writings, and dialogues from a diversity of collaborators; a new Public Space Fellowship program; and in-depth community consultations, Safe in Public Space aims to arrive at shareable learnings and best practices for spaces city-wide, as well as specific safety commitments for the future of The Bentway.
Making Safe Spaces
What makes a space “safe”? How are feelings of safety determined both from the top down — by bureaucratic factors like land ownership, public space architectures, or the (un)availability of necessary infrastructures and resources — and from the ground up, as cultivated by and for distinct cultures or communities? Here we explore such issues as the public/private divide, particularly amidst decolonization; defensive architecture and design justice in the public realm; public space design as collectively reimagined due to COVID; and the essential creation of safe spaces-within-spaces to serve community needs.
Defining Public Safety: For Whom?
Our appreciation of public safety depends on how we define it, and on whom we’re defining it for. The perception of safety for one individual or community cannot come at the expense of another. Yet, based on our bodies, our identities, and our lived experiences, we may require different provisions to feel safe in shared spaces. Our definitions of public safety may differ. Here we address issues of embodiment and representation in public space; matters of invisibility, visibility, and hypervisibility, and its repercussions; and the performance or “proof” of one’s self and of the encounters that may meet the body in public space.
Public Health + Safety
Both historically speaking and in a contemporary context, there exists a direct connection between public health directives and public space safety. By what measures do we declare a public health crisis, and for whom? How does a “crisis” designation shape spaces, behaviors, and resource-based responses? Here we acknowledge the legacy of public health recommendations on public safety and public space, as well as issues of health equity for at-risk populations, matters of mental health in public space, and the specific impact of COVID on the public realm.
Safety Stewardship/Governance
When it comes to public space safety, who are the decision makers? How is safety communicated, evaluated and enforced? How do institutional structures and biases shape the experiences of a diversity of communities in public space, and how might those experiences differ through a redistribution of resources and power? Here we explore different models of public space governance, community stewardship and specifically youth agency, of traditional safety metrics or measurements as well as renewed systems of accountability for those with the authority to shape public space.
About The Bentway
The Bentway re-imagines how we build, experience, activate, and value public space together. Its work is anchored by a new and growing site located under Toronto’s Gardiner Expressway, which is operated, maintained, and programed by The Bentway Conservancy as a platform for creative practice, public art, and connected urban life. As a new model for public space in Toronto and a forum for social engagement, The Bentway continues to evolve amidst the changing landscape of the city, developing opportunities and partnerships that address the key issues of our time.
Phase 1 of The Bentway knits together seven local neighbourhoods with over 80,000 residents, becoming a gateway to the waterfront, while providing access to important attractions and destinations. This section of The Bentway is located on the lands of Fort York National Historic Site, recognized by the Government of Canada as a site of national significance.