Fürstenfeldbruck - sofas instead of cars, information stands instead of motorbikes.
If temporary public “parking facilities” are created where parking spaces are otherwise reserved for motor vehicles, then it is “Park (ing) Day”.
As part of this campaign, which originally comes from San Francisco, artists and activists, authorities and associations show on a demarcated area of 15 square meters - that is how much a car needs - how parking spaces could be used differently.
They all question how much space should be given to car traffic.
The city of Fürstenfeldbruck also took part in the campaign, which took place on September 17th on Brucker Hauptstrasse, and this for the third time.
With a total of 16 different participating groups, the offer was even more diverse than in the last two years, you can hear from the city's information stand.
There was a booth of the city foundation that presented its work, a booth of the nutrition council, where everything revolved around the "lens" or one of the animal lovers Brucker Land, whose focus is on education: Better to adopt a pet than one to buy.
The district youth association also took the chance and secured one of the sixteen places.
The aim was to inform young people and children about the upcoming federal election and encourage them to take part in the U18 election.
At another stand, representatives of the Fürstenfeldbruck tour guides presented their diverse program of city tours.
In addition, they had prepared a small city rally where the citizens could learn interesting facts about Fürstenfeldbruck.
For example, it was asked when the wooden Amperbrücke was replaced by a stone bridge or how many green smalts, the colored potassium silicate glasses, are attached to the Sparkasse building.
An old friend at the Brucker Park (ing) Day was the ADFC Fürstenfeldbruck, which took part in the campaign as in the two previous years.
Instead of a “bike washing station”, however, this year the association offered bicycle owners the opportunity to attach a personal code to their vehicle in order to make it easier for the police to find stolen bicycles.
Maximilian Geiger