Plaza
A paved public space for citizens to gather for civic, religious, or commercial reasons. Plazas often have significant buildings surrounding them such as courthouses, city halls, churches, performing arts centers, and markets. While it may include fountains or trees, a plaza’s primary characteristic is a carefully graded and paved floor. Plazas are spatial volumes as much as paved surfaces; they bring light and air into the city, contrasting with adjacent streets that are often shaded due to their narrower width. By the mid-twentieth century, designers adapted the plaza typology to new commuter-required infrastructure, adapting them to such spaces as the roofs of below-grade parking garages and to urban sites that emerged from the demolition of urban renewal. As with the creation of pedestrian malls, courtyards, atria, and roof gardens, the creation of plazas has extended the functional landscape into the built environment, significantly enriching the visitor experience.
In suburbs, plazas often have been built as “visual amenities” instead of public spaces; as such, many of them have functioned less successfully as gathering spaces.
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Freedom Plaza
Washington, DC -
Grand Army Plaza - New York
New York, NY -
Pershing Park
Washington, DC -
Memorial Fountain Park
Palm Beach, FL -
Standard Oil Plaza
San Francisco, CA -
One Post Plaza
San Francisco, CA -
Christian Science Center
Boston, MA -
Civic Center Park - Santa Clara
Santa Clara, CA -
Kiley Garden
Tampa, FL -
Lincoln Center
New York, NY -
Center Plaza
Baltimore, MD -
Rockefeller Center
New York, NY -
One Maritime Plaza
San Francisco, CA -
Peavey Plaza
Minneapolis, MN -
Lovejoy Plaza
Portland, OR -
Mellon Square
Pittsburgh, PA