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Who Shows Up When Participation Is Still Emerging?

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In Burgas, the recent consultation on the park redesign revealed something subtle but important about how people participate when a participatory culture is still taking shape. Instead of proposals, assemblies, or co-design workshops, the municipality relied almost entirely on surveys, a lightweight, low-barrier format that feels familiar and safe. And the demographics of who responded tell us a lot about where the culture of participation currently stands.

BurgasAges1

Most respondents were between 25 and 45, a group young enough to be digitally active and socially aware, but old enough to care deeply about neighbourhood stability, safety, and long-term public space quality. This age cohort consistently appears in early-stage participation ecosystems: they are busy, often juggling work and childcare, and therefore more likely to fill out a short survey than attend a three-hour workshop. They respond when the process meets them where they already are.

Across these age groups, a similar pattern emerges: there is willingness, even eagerness, to participate, especially within formats that feel comfortable and low-pressure. This is seen by the willingness or even openness of the residents who answered the survey to volunteer at the park.

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The next steps in this will be exciting to see how a culture of togetherness is nurtured in the implementation of their New European Bauhaus solution.

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