Age: 38
Job Title: Senior Land Use Planner, Edmonton Catholic Schools
Why He’s Top 40: He is a champion for school-centred neighbourhoods, changing the way cities are planned.
What Do You Like Most About Edmonton?: His home neighbourhood of Belgravia. “I especially like the strip of potential at 115th Street and 76th Avenue, otherwise known as the Belgravia Hub and Gracious Goods [Caf] .”
Rob Tarulli was an elementary teacher at St. Alphonsus School in Edmonton’s inner city when the infamous Cromdale Hotel was condemned in 2004.
“It was a very seedy place but, for better or worse, it was a place where people gathered – a community hub,” he says. In its absence, neighbourhood residents began connecting at a very different destination: St. Alphonsus School. It was an uncomfortable shift at first, since many people in the area had “a negative view of schooling” – some were even survivors of residential schools. But the location stuck. “They started to meet other parents and talk about things happening in their kids’ lives,” says Tarulli. The culture of the community shifted.
This inspired the young teacher to write a letter to a newspaper, which was read with interest by Dr. David Witty, the dean of the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Manitoba. He e-mailed Tarulli, encouraging him to apply to his faculty’s city planning master’s program.
Ready to make a career change, Tarulli followed that advice. After a couple of years in Winnipeg, he returned to his hometown of Edmonton. He was inspired by his thesis, an examination of school-centred community design – an emerging trend in urban planning. “The focus of most neighbourhoods tends to be commerce-based,” he says. In contrast, school-centred design is just how it sounds. It emphasizes building areas around schools, ideally multi-use school sites with wrap-around services like day care, health care and continuing education, which serve the broader community. And, even when the children in an area have grown up and left, other residents can use the site.