Compile a list of neighborhood problems. Prepare this based on your own observations, on interviews with neighborhood leaders, and on information obtained from newspapers and electronic media.
Which of the problems listed should be given the highest priority?
Are any of these problems currently being addressed? If so, by whom?
What solutions can you suggest for these problems? Who should initiate these solutions?
Select one problem for further study and for student action. After obtaining as much information as possible about the problem, develop your own proposals for solutions. Bring these proposals to the attentions of neighborhood leaders, other members of the community, and, subsequently, to the appropriate agencies.
Research the lives of early pioneer settlers and families in your neighborhood.
Compile the research into short biographical sketches.
Write stories or plays about the lives of these people in early Albuquerque.
Locate and map the community's historical sites associated with the pioneers studied.
Transplant one of the early pioneers to today. Conduct a simulated radio interview with this person. Discuss how he or she might feel about the changes in the neighborhood.
Contact the City Planning Department to see if your neighborhood has a sector plan. If it does, obtain a copy and study it.
Identity areas that are poorly planned or poorly zoned.
Replan your neighborhood into the ideal.
Would you change the population density?
Would the environmental quality be improved? How?
Would human services be improved by your planning changes? Explain
Would there be a change in public facilities (e.g., parks, libraries)?
Would there be more or less business activity in the community?
Would the economy of the community be effected? Strengthened? Weakened? how?
Complete the following sentences:
If I could change just one thing in this community it would be...
The single greatest problem this community has is...
If I had $10 million to spend on this community, I would...
The single best thing in this community is...
The people in this community make me proud because...
In the future, this community...
Develop a historic timeline for your neighborhood. Compare major events in your neighborhood to those happening in the United States and the world. Use the computer program Timeliner for this project.
Did any national events have any direct or indirect effects on the development of your neighborhood?
Choose one block in an older section of your neighborhood for study. Through interviews and research of city records, determine what occupied each site on the block, 10, 20 and 30 years ago.
Do any of the original houses or businesses still occupy their original sites?
What caused the original structure to be replaced? Were there zoning changes? Did some businesses fail or move to new, more profitable sites?
Are there any open spaces left on the block? Are there any plans for these spaces?
How has the value of the property changed?
Working in groups, rate your community on each of the following:
Degree to which the community's development has adhered to Albuquerque's Comprehensive Plan
Adequate open space in the community
Adequate parks
Traffic congestion
Commercial areas separate from residential areas
Population density
Water quality
Degree of citizens' involvement in community affairs
Responsiveness of elected officials to citizens
Friendliness of residents to each other
Quality of community shared activities
Relationship between the elderly and the younger generation
Amount of space allowed young people
The schools
Crime
Develop plans to improve those areas you feel could be better and could give more Sense of Place to your community.
Design a new community in the Albuquerque.
What location (undeveloped land) would you choose? Why?
What environmental factors must be considered? What impact will the new community have on the natural environment and all the services needed to maintain the new community?
What population factors need to be considered? Will this community have school age children? Where will schools be located? What facilities for the elderly will it have?
Construct a model of the community.
Read about Mesa del Sol; compare your community to it. What are its strengths? Its weaknesses?
Map your own community, either graphically or verbally. Consider such points:
How do you determine the boundaries of your neighborhood?
What public or private facilities help to give a sense of neighborhood?
What, if any, physical features help to define the neighborhood?
What commonalties are found in the architecture?
What similarities exist among people of the community?
What subjective factors contribute to a feeling of community? To an absence of such a feeling?
Is there a neighborhood association? If there is, what is its focus?
How do you feel about your neighborhood?
Take a trip on a public bus to Old Town, Martineztown, Huning Highland, or the Country club area to note how architecture helps to define these neighborhoods. Sketch architectural details which are part of our Southwestern heritage or of the Victorian period which characterized houses in Huning Highlands. Work in committees to learn more about the architecture in these sections of town.
Why were Pueblo and Territorial styles used?
Why is the architecture in Huning highland so different from Old Town and Martineztown?
To what extent has the Pueblo or Territorial style influenced architecture in other parts of the city?
Read this statement from the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Comprehensive Plan.
"The goal is to create a quality built environment which perpetuates the tradition of identifiable, individual but integrated communities within the metropolitan area and which offers variety and maximum choice in housing, transportation, work area and lifestyle whole creating a visually pleasing built environment."
Discuss the types of diversity which exist in Albuquerque Bernalillo County.
Does diversity enrich a community? If so, how does it compare to the importance of diversity in a natural community? How can a growing community contribute to increased diversity?
What conditions in our rapidly growing city and county might lead toward increased homogeneity? (Look alike housing, look alike shopping centers, expedient commercial buildings, etc.). What are the economic or social reasons for this look alike syndrome?
Conduct a panel discussion on neighborhoods and neighborhood associations. Panelists might either be adults who represent government agencies and citizen groups or students. Discussion might include the following:
Should neighborhoods be defined by self organization, or should the city serve as a catalyst in determining how many there should be and where they should be located?
When neighborhood identity is not clearly established through tradition or because a feeling of community has developed for other reasons, how can neighbors be defined?
What role should the private sector and the Albuquerque Board of Realtors play in neighborhood revitalization?
What guidelines will be necessary to ensure that neighborhoods, in determining their own specific goals, select projects which are compatible with citywide needs and objectives?
What are the ways for neighborhood associations to provide community input?
Trace a large outline map of Bernalillo County. Using colored pens or construction paper, mark the major sub areas in the county ( South Valley, Los Ranchos, North Valley, Paradise Hills, Taylor Ranch, Downtown, Westgate, Sandia Heights, etc.). Indicate which of these areas are city, country or independent municipalities.
Why has Albuquerque followed a course of annexation of surrounding land?
What are the pros and cons of annexation?
What is the current status of the city county consolidation concept?
Which sub areas of the county were settled first? Which were most recently developed? Which are growing most rapidly?
Obtain 1990 census figures from the Albuquerque Bernalillo County Planning Department. Construct a pie graph showing the percentage of people in the major sub areas of the county (South Valley, North Valley, Paradise Hills, Taylor Ranch, Marineztown, South Broadway section, Country Club section, Old Town, Downtown, Near Heights, Northeast Heights, Westgate, etc.). Use a computer spreadsheet to help you.
Which areas of the city and county have the highest population?
Which areas have the greatest potential for growth?
Using a map or Planning Department figures to determine geographical size, which area is the most densely populated? Which is the least dense?
Prepare a chart like the one below. Fill in the population figures. Obtain the information to complete it by contacting the City Planning Department.
Population of Major Sub Areas 1920 to 1990 |
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Sub Areas |
Date |
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1920 |
1940 |
1960 |
1980 |
1990 |
|
North Valley |
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South Valley |
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Old Town |
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Downtown |
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Barelas |
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Martineztown |
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University Heights |
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Uptown |
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Huning Highlands |
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Far NE Heights |
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Westgate |
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Northwest Mesa |
Under what circumstances was each of these areas settled and developed?
Rank order the population of each of these areas in 1920, 1940, 1960, 1980 and 1990. Which areas grew more rapidly between 1960 and 1990? Why?
(Up to Section II, Back to Eye Opener Activities 3, On to Activities for the Senses and Sensibilities 3)