1st Edition

How Good Are Parklets? Reclaiming Street Space Through Temporary and Tactical Urbanism

By Quentin Stevens Copyright 2026
324 Pages 77 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

324 Pages 77 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

324 Pages 77 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Parklets are innovative, dynamic public spaces that are installed onto on-street car-parking spots. These very small spaces have had a very large and lasting impact on city streets. How Good Are Parklets? is the first book to critically examine the parklet’s purposes, formats and impacts. It traces the parklet’s history, from its invention in 2005 as an experiment that tactically reclaimed... Read more

Introduction

Quentin Stevens and Dale Leorke

 

I. THE PARKLET’S FORMAT

1. A brief history of parklets

Quentin Stevens

2. Parklet design

Quentin Stevens and Merrick Morley

 

II. THE PARKLET’S CONTEXT

3. Mapping parklet locations in Melbourne as an indicator of street capacity

Quentin Stevens, Merrick Morley and Kim Dovey

4. Contexts and clustering

Quentin Stevens, Merrick Morley and Mohammad Mohammadi

5. The contested value of parklets

Quentin Stevens and Merrick Morley

 

III. THE PARKLET’S FUTURE

6. From ‘pop-up’ to permanent

Quentin Stevens, Dale Leorke, Kim Dovey, Fauster Awepuga and Merrick Morley

7. Creating a public, playful parklet: design practice and the COVID-19 pandemic

Quentin Stevens, Dale Leorke, Ha Minh-Hai Thai, Troy Innocent and Carlo Tolentino

8. ‘Community parklets’

Quentin Stevens

9. Parklets and the public good

Quentin Stevens

Biography

Quentin Stevens is Professor in the School of Architecture and Urban Design at RMIT University in Melbourne. He studied temporary uses of urban spaces in Germany as an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow and led a recent Australian Research Council funded project that examined temporary and tactical urbanism in Australia and internationally. His publications include Temporary and Tactical Urbanism (2022), The Ludic City (2007), Loose Space (2007) and Activating Urban Waterfronts (2020).

"Quentin Stevens explores with brio the evolution of parklets in Australian, European, and North American cities demonstrating how they evolved and diversified over time. A fascinating book and a must-read for those interested in the reclaiming of streets for public use and the temporary and more permanent transformations affecting cities during and after the COVID-19 pandemic."

Lauren Andres, Professor, Bartlett School of Planning, University College London, UK

"Parklets have demonstrated versatility in addressing an impressive range of goals. Whether you are a novice or seasoned in the field, this highly insightful, practical book offers the ultimate, all-round guide to realizing the transformative potential of parklets."

Luca Bertolini, Professor of Urban Planning, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands

 "How Good Are Parklets? casts a nuanced and thorough look at the contextual, cultural, and design characteristics that create good parklets. It teaches urban designers, planners and policymakers what works and what doesn’t in parklet design, and how parklets can better create opportunities for street vibrancy, pedestrianism and cycling."

Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris, Distinguished Professor, Luskin School of Public Affairs, UCLA, USA

"Drawing on empirical studies and comparisons of cases across the globe, this book presents a thorough and critical examination of parklets’ profound contribution to city life, urban design, civic engagement, and the transformation of governance and planning practices."

Jeff Hou, Professor, Head of Department of Architecture, National University of Singapore