Lara Kristin Herndon

Lara Kristin Herndon studied Art History at Emory University and has written about art, architecture and design since 1995. Her byline has appeared in Metropolis, Art Papers, Architecture Boston, Entrepreneur, Think, and other national magazines. She lives in Greenwich, CT.

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This is Our Chance to Rethink Safe Streets and Public Spaces

This is Our Chance to Rethink Safe Streets and Public Spaces - Featured Image
Image © Sean Pavone

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

A global pandemic can change the way you look at things. In Greenwich, Connecticut, as with most places, restaurants and bars are shuttered now, schools are closed, and traffic is sparse as people stay home and maintain social distancing. 

But each weekday, as the sun comes up over the eerily tranquil streets of the historic downtown business district, First Selectman Fred Camillo is still heading to the office. Camillo works in the Town Hall, a public building that’s been off-limits to the public—and to most employees—since mid-March, when all of Connecticut entered a constantly evolving state of lockdown following an executive order by Governor Ned Lamont in response to the COVID-19 outbreak.