Editor's Picks + Features

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High-rise confusion on Barrington

HALIFAX - Last week HRM Council appeared to approve...

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HRM by Re-Design: Meta Library, Part Two: Social Superstructure

A series that examines urban and architectural issues...

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Atlantic Snapshots: Phantoms at the Fountain

Halifax, Nova Scotia photo by Dean Bouchard, member...

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Spacing Saturday

Spacing Saturday highlights posts from across Spacing’s...

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World Wide Wednesday: Where in the world?

Each week we will be focusing on blogs from around...

Archives /// Halifax

Is the city a sketchbook? JJ Steeves tackles our ideas about graffiti

HALIFAX - Councillor Linda Mosher’s recent comparison of street art to vandalism and graffiti has brought a variety of reactions. One of the most extreme counterarguments? That all street art is legitimate, and that the city itself is a sketchbook. We wanted to ask a street artist how they felt about the recent attack on graffiti art.  Jei Jei Steeves is both within and staunchly unique from the Halifax urban art milieu. She’s a Halifax artist whose stickers of stray kittens have been popping around the city's streets to say things like "Your lopsided breasts are really beautiful," "I support the troops but I don't support the war," and "I don't like the way you're looking at my tits."

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Events Guide: Public meeting on proposed Bayers Road expansion

Editor's Note: From the desk of District 14 Councillor Jennifer Watts. Read her op-ed piece in the Chronicle-Herald here. WHAT: Bayers Road Widening Public Meeting WHEN: Wednesday, September 14, 7:00pm WHERE: St. Andrew's Community Centre, 6955 Bayers Road, Halifax FACEBOOK EVENT: https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=114181238686810 HALIFAX - A public meeting on the proposed Bayers Road widening will be at 7 pm on Wednesday September 14 at St Andrew's Community Centre, Bayers Road, organized by Councillors Jerry Blumenthal and Jennifer Watts. Staff will give an overview of two items before ...

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Transit can be a more moving experience than road widening

EDITOR'S NOTE: This article is kindly cross-posted from the Halifax Media Co-op. Check out the original here. Also, Spacing Atlantic has created a Facebook Event to easily notify and inform others of the Public Meeting on Bayers Road Expansion, please help us get the word out! https://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=114181238686810 HALIFAX - There's no way to get around it.  Metro needs better transit. Fortunately, the It's More Than Buses group have big ideas of how to fix that. After several public meetings,  this week they unveiled a proposed High-Frequency Public Transit Network [PDF] and a set of guiding principles. It's an exciting and promising approach led by the Planning and Design Centre (PDC) in Halifax in partnership with Fusion Halifax.  More than 100 members of the urban and suburban public participated in the meetings.  Also present were Eddie Robar, the new head of Metro Transit,  and Richard Butts, HRM's Chief Administrative Officer.

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Events Guide: It’s More Than Buses – Final Session

WHAT: It's More Than Buses - Mobilize Public Support WHEN: Wednesday, September 7 – 6:00pm WHERE: Halifax World Trade and Convention Centre HOW MUCH: Free The third and final It's More Than Buses session will focus on mobilizing public support to implement the ideas developed by participants at the previous two sessions. We will also review our high-frequency transit network concept for HRM, a synthesis of the ideas mapped out by participants at session 2. Guest speaker Paul Bedford, former Chief Planner for the City of Toronto, will open session 3 ...

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Atlantic Snapshots: Blast from the past

VIEW-5490 Barrington Street, Halifax, NS, about 1915 Wm. Notman & Son About 1915, 20th century Description "Halifax, N.S.: Capital and commercial centre of the picturesque province of Nova Scotia, Halifax is charmingly situated on one of the most magnificent natural harbors of the world. It is one of Canada's two Atlantic winter ports, with important trade to Europe, the United States, the West Indies, etc., and is also a large naval and military station. It is strongly fortified, chief of the fortifications being the Citadel, elevated 256 feet above sea-level, and commanding the city ...

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Urban art is not graffiti

Editor's Note: Halifax resident Allison Sparling writes a guest post for Spacing Atlantic on Urban Art. HALIFAX - Recently, Halifax Councillor Linda Mosher and chairwoman of HRM graffiti task force suggested the Hip-Hop Hopscotch Festival should cancel it's urban art component because it resembles graffiti. It was unclear what she actually said; the Chronicle Herald piece which reported her views was incredibly sparse; the Huffington Post also picked up the story. The anti-urban art sentiment was enough to upset some, enrage others, and question whether she truly understood what urban art is, and how it impacts our city. Then of course, came the question: How many people really do?

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Atlantic Snapshots: Early Morning Halifax

Halifax, Nova Scotia Photo by Stephen Cushing, member of Spacing Atlantic's flickr pool.

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Events Guide: Parchetypes, Point Pleasant Park

WHAT: Parchetypes, Public Performance - HRM Open Project WHEN: Starting today, August 15th, 11am-1pm - September 11, 2011 WHERE: Point Pleasant Park HOW MUCH: Free HALIFAX, NS - Parchetypes is a site-specific performance created by artist, William Robinson for Point Pleasant Park and supported through the Halifax Regional Municipalities Open Projects program. In concert with this project, Robinson explains, Parchetypes is based on two real-life personalities who define the experience of attending Point Pleasant Park through their musical performances. These two parchetypes or fathers of the park use this extraordinary urban forest in order to nurture the park’s natural elements and entertain park-goers with their musical expressions. The first I have encountered as an anonymous bag piper. His disembodied sounds are a common auditory occurrence and are part of the Point Pleasant Park experience on any given summer day. Like a living ghost nestled in the park’s forest this musical patriarch offers up his kinship with the park by leaving only trace chanters and drones from his pipes into the wind. The second is an elder who provides an embodied auditory experience. Like a guardian to the park he plays fiddle music on his small portable cassette tape stereo at the Tower Road entrance. As the park’s proverbial gatekeeper he provides a transitional point by projecting a unique tone onto the park experience.

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