From PARK(ing) Day to Nashville’s rainbow crosswalk, tactical urbanism can be seen in various forms throughout Music City — and it’s only growing.
This week, NDOT launched a new tactical urbanism program. We’ll have more on that below, but first...
What is it exactly?
These community-driven projects are often temporary, low-cost, and scalable initiatives aimed at improving public spaces. Think: parklets, open streets, pop-up parks, and even Little Free Libraries.
Applying for funding + permits
First, get familiar with the concept using this guide. Next, your community organization or neighborhood group can fill out the application, detailing your project, before emailing the completed form.
Applications are reviewed (and funded) on a quarterly basis with the next deadline coming up on Monday, Aug. 19. Officials will select four projects for the program’s first cycle, which will be announced by mid-September.
If you’ve already planned your project and secured funding, you’ll still request installation approval via the form and process above — just mark “no” on the first question.