Another thought: I think that the COVID disaster's silver-lining is a shaking off of so much of the baggage of how things were "supposed to be", particularly for public realm, parks and pathways. Every night I see small picnics in parks I used to not see anything, of people hanging out, eating, drinking. Very casual and unprogrammed. Like usual, fears of chaos and disorder are largely overblown in a world where someone actually just uses a public space the way they want - rather than restrict themselves to unsuspicious dog walking and avoid loitering wherever possible. People seem so much more willing to sit on benches, on the grass, hang in parks and just chill. Calgary always had small pockets of this before - but was always overwhelmed by the burden of "can't drink in parks", "it's too cold", "no one bicycles or picnics here" etc.
Many people I know would never have done any of those any outdoor but now do it daily - at first their response was "because we can't go to a restaurant or bar", to "it's so much safer and nice to be outside", to "why haven't we always done this? It's better, cheaper, friendlier, healthier..." Some friends who felt uncomfortable for cracking one beer at a picnic before have now sworn off bars and restuarants until COVID is over in a number of years.
Of course winter and weather do exist and many are will be happy to ease back into the way things were eventually. But I hope that we are seeing the birth of the next generation of active, un-programmed vibrancy in our outdoor spaces. This whole episode is a reminder that the restrictions we place on ourselves or on our public spaces through bylaws are really just an artificial construct. Human-made rules with outdated judgmental overtones and little intuitive rationale struggle to resist change when all the underlying assumptions of how things are "supposed to be" shift dramatically.