Community Organizations Have Their Say
Community Input Open Meeting #9, June 4 2023
What Are the Hopes and Dreams of Princeton’s Community-Minded Organizations?
Housing Initiatives of Princeton, Carol Golden, Past Chair; Arts Council of Princeton, Adam Welch, Executive Director; Princeton Community Housing, Edward Truscelli, Executive Director; The Board of Education, Princeton Public Schools, Brian McDonald; Princeton Progressive Action Group, Yael Niv, Co-Founder; Princeton Mutual Aid, Matt Mlezcko, PU Grad Student; Climate Central, Ben Strauss, President & CEO; Witherspoon Jackson Historic and Cultural Society, Shirley Satterfield; Not in Our Town, Linda Oppenheim, Board Member; Princeton Environmental Commission, Heidi Fichtenbaum AIA; Walkable Princeton, David Keddie, Co-Founder; Princeton Housing Authority, Joseph Weiss AIA, Chair of the Board; Mr. Rogers Neighbors Kindness Project, Blair Miller, Founder; Princeton Senior Resource Center: Barbara Prince, Board Member.
2022-06-04 Book Compressed June 4, 2022 MEETING
Welcome to the new Princeton Future website
Please check back soon. And mark your calendar for the next Princeton Future/Public Library listening session on affordable housing: Saturday, September 23, 9 to noon at the library.
Open Spaces – Building Equitable Access, Health & Resilience – May 13, 2023 Video
Princeton Open Space manager Cindy Taylor leads a discussion that includes representatives of most open space organizations and advocates in the municipality.
Public Lands & Open Spaces: Hopes for Climate Resilience, Equitable Access & Community Well Being
COMMUNITY INPUT OPEN MEETING #8
MAY 13, 2023
Of Princeton’s nearly 12,000 acres of land, more than a quarter are identified as recreation or open space, valuable as a habitat for wildlife, a home for native plants, and a refuge for residents seeking physical and mental revitalization.
Click here to download meeting notes
CLICK THE LINK BELOW TO SEE VIDEO FROM THE MEETING:
Princeton’s Open Spaces – Building Equitable Access, Health and Resilience
October 17, 2009 — Considering a Poets’ Alley
On October 17, 2009, Princeton Future convened a llistening session to ask residents what kinds of changes they could imagine in several areas in the heart of the downtown area. One area was the alley off Nassau Street, just east of Witherspoon Street, leading to a cluster of small parking areas, loading areas, and parking stalls. Could the alley be turned into a functioning place — a Poets’ Alley? Could the area at the end of the alley be redeveloped into a more productive space — possibly for outside dining or a mini-plaza?
Community Input — Land use & Circulation 3-11-2023
Community Input Open Meeting #7, March 11, 2023
How We Get Around: Land Use and Circulation In Princeton
How can we get around town with fewer cars, or no car at all? How can we make housing that is affordable and also more accessible to the entire town? How do we coordinate with existing transit providers to create a more convenient, cheaper, and appealing mobility environment?