Living Streets on the Amazing Places podcast

Earlier this month, 3-term former Saanich councillor Dean Murdock spoke to Alix Tier from our Living Streets team on his new Amazing Places podcast.

Dean and Alix spoke about how walking should always be a consideration in our communities, and how especially now — in this time of living, working and playing locally — we might be able to encourage communities to make changes to facilitate better walking environments.

Click the image to go to Amazing Places: Episode 4.

Click the image to go to Amazing Places: Episode 4.

Dean asked all the right questions, such as the big one: why focus on walking? As Alix points out, walking is great for our physical health, but especially when the pandemic has led to a work-from-home boom, it's been an important way to maintain mental health and social connections. Staying inside, feeling the COVID-19-related uncertainty, and having to maintain physical distance was challenging for all of us, and continues to place limits on how and where we move about. It has also has allowed walking (or rolling, depending on your mobility challenges) to serve as common ground for all — a democratizing activity, if you will.

How about walking without a purpose? Dean and Alix delve into the many ways we have changed our approach to walking. And not just from the perspective of the ‘average citizen’. Thanks to the creativity of cities and towns across BC, we now see ‘slow streets’ — low-tech engineering measures, like speed humps, raised intersections, or narrowing of roadways, aimed at reducing motor vehicle speeds and congestion in local communities, to make more space and safer walking conditions for people.

As Dean notes, it sometimes also takes political will for local governments to make decisions around transportation changes, even those that are common sense for all the right health and environmental reasons. And as Alix notes, changes that make streets in our communities more conducive to local trips “challenges our thinking, and why we used to make certain decisions and choices about where we shop, where we recreate, and how we interact with the urban realm.”

Take a listen to this episode of Amazing Places.