Next weekend I’ll do something I haven’t done before — lead a Jane’s Walk. My route will explore part of Calgary’s Tuxedo Park neighbourhood, the primary setting for my historical mystery novel, A Killer Whisky. Heritage Calgary lists six Tuxedo Park sites with heritage value along our twenty-minute stroll. My favourite is a continuous row of workers’ cottages built in 1912-13 and lovingly preserved. I imagined my the protagonist of my novel set in 1918 living in one of these homes.

Jane’s Walks take place in numerous cities every spring to commemorate the May 4th birthday of American-Canadian journalist, author, and activist Jane Jacobs. When I studied urban planning at Concordia University in the 1970s and 80s, Jacobs was the heroine of my professors. She wrote and acted against the dominant approach to urban renewal of the previous decades — tear down old buildings and replace them with concrete blocks, clear slums, and build expressways through neighbourhoods without regard for the residents. Jacobs espoused the opposite. “Downtown is for people,” she wrote. She advocated for community life on the streets, mixed land use over suburban sprawl and separate residential and commercial zones, and grass-roots city planning.
Jacobs rose to prominence in the 1960s during the fight to prevent New York City’s Greenwich Village from becoming a high-rise development. She was instrumental in stopping the Lower Manhattan Expressway, which would have cut through the city’s SoHo, Little Italy, and Chinatown neighbourhoods. At a public hearing for the latter, she was arrested for inciting a riot. The charge was later reduced to disorderly conduct.

In 1968, Jacobs moved with her husband and three children to Toronto, Canada, where she became a leader in the movement to stop the Spadina Expressway. “Cities should be built for people not cars” was a prevailing theme of her work. After her death in 2006, the city of Toronto declared May 5, 2007, Jane Jacob’s Day and offered two dozen free neighborhood walks, which became nicknamed Jane’s Walks. The following year, the event spread to eight cities and towns throughout Canada, and by 2016, Jane’s Walks were taking place in 212 cities in 36 countries and six continents.
For this year’s Jane’s Walk Festival Weekend (May 2-4, 2025) over 500 cities around the world will be participating. When I applied to lead a walk, I had no idea the event was this huge. To find out if your city is involved, you can search the Jane’s Walk website.
Walks are led by volunteers and free, although you generally need to register as they fill up. Anyone with a proposal and enthusiasm can apply to lead a walk and will probably be accepted. Despite my research on Tuxedo Park, I still have a fair bit to prepare for the walk. A first step was another field trip to the neighbourhood. Three friends and I “walked the walk,” decided on the best places for me to stand for my talks, and discovered some additional points of interest.
In the spirit of Jane Jacobs, Jane’s Walks go ahead, rain, shine, or snow. I’ll be ready for them all.