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Letter from Berkeley: Requiem for People’s Park

Billy Simpson can’t imagine Berkeley without People’s Park. The iconic park in this California college town was where he grew up playing. “That park is like, it’s freedom,” says Mr. Simpson. “It’s just love.”

Shipping containers now line the park’s perimeter, blocking public access. A decadeslong power struggle over the best use of People’s Park came to a head last week, when the University of California, Berkeley, the park’s owner, cleared it of unhoused residents and erected the container wall. 

Why We Wrote This

People’s Park – Berkeley’s iconic gathering spot, founded in the 1960s – sits on valuable real estate in the heart of the university town. Plans to develop on the site raise questions about public space and what’s best for a community.

The move secures the site for a university housing development, long held up by protests, vandalism, and legal challenges. 

“We are going to open up a beautiful building and a beautiful new public park space that will be for the enjoyment of everyone,” says Kyle Gibson, a UC Berkeley spokesperson.

That vision faces opposition and doubters. Many locals now feel squeezed out. And nearby shop owner Al Geyer sees the new development as part of an effort to “defunkify” Berkeley. 

Still, the park’s zeitgeist of acceptance is what defenders hold to. 

“They can’t build the wall between us,” says Jen, a local resident who did not give her last name, citing privacy concerns. “Because we’ve already created these connections.”

Billy Simpson can’t imagine Berkeley without People’s Park. The iconic park in this California college town was where he played growing up. As he got older, he made some of his best friends there. When he worked in food delivery, he would bring canceled orders to unhoused residents who found rest there.

“That park is like, it’s freedom. It is what Berkeley used to be,” says Mr. Simpson. “It’s just love.”

People’s Park inspired Krista McAtee to attend the University of California, Berkeley three blocks away. The fifth-year student gets emotional recalling her first visit as a 13-year-old on a campus tour with her family. She returned home to Southern California, decorated a jean jacket with “power to the people,” and set her sights on the school. 

Why We Wrote This

People’s Park – Berkeley’s iconic gathering spot, founded in the 1960s – sits on valuable real estate in the heart of the university town. Plans to develop on the site raise questions about public space and what’s best for a community.

“This idea of community, this idea of taking care of one another,” says Ms. McAtee, “are values that I learned from being at People’s Park.” 

Shipping containers line the park perimeter now, blocking public access. A decadeslong power struggle over the best use of People’s Park came to a head last week, when UC Berkeley, which owns the park, cleared it of unhoused residents and erected the container wall. The move secures the site for a long-planned university housing development that has been held up by protests, vandalism, and legal challenges.

“This is not a forever installation,” says Kyle Gibson, a UC Berkeley spokesperson. “This is going to be here through construction, and when we are done, we are going to open up a beautiful building and a beautiful new public park space that will be for the enjoyment of everyone.”

Ali Martin/The Christian Science Monitor

Berkeley resident Billy Simpson walks down Telegraph Avenue in the city, Jan. 9, 2024. Mr. Simpson is frustrated with plans by the University of California, Berkeley to build housing at the nearby People’s Park, which has been a community hub for over 50 years.

That vision faces opposition and doubters. But tension has always been part of the park’s origin story.

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