For too many years, Malta allowed its environment to become denser, harder, and poorer in public breathing space.Families and residents in our most urbanised communities felt this constriction in their daily rhythm every single day. When the government was slow to act, it was civil society, local activists, and environmental organisations that stood their ground. They insisted on a simple, powerful truth: well-being and quality of life are not optional extras.Public open spaces are not merely decorative; they are the vital infrastructure of a healthy community. This persistence deserves more than recognition; it deserves to be the foundation of our new national policy. The change we see today (the move toward reclaiming public land) did not come from top-down foresight alone; it came because people refused to stay quiet. This is the energy that will define Malta’s future, where the public doesn’t just ask for space, but actively participates in creating it.Why are our major urban parks still stuck in planning?This matters even more because the government cannot pretend that every urban greening ambition on the table was the product of long-term planning. The record is more mixed than that. Labour’s 2022 campaign made much of five major urban park-and-garden pledges. Yet for a long stretch of this legislature, several of those flagship promises remained stalled, revised, delayed or still outside full implementation. Floriana’s St Anne Street was pledged as a garden with traffic diverted underground, only for the underpass concept to be ruled unfeasible later on. San Ġwann moved furthest in formal planning, but other green spaces like Ħamrun and Santa Venera lagged behind in the pre-planning phase. Cospicua moved, but much later than first announced.Can public demand turn these sites into a national turning point?It’s time to approach this with honesty. Manoel Island, White Rocks and Fort Campbell were not the execution of some clear and settled 2022 national-park blueprint. They emerged as opportunities during the course of the legislature, shaped by changing circumstances, public pressure and growing national insistence that large sites of extraordinary value should not simply default to development logic. In Manoel Island’s case, the government itself has acknowledged that the public campaign was decisive in bringing the site to this point. White Rocks and Fort Campbell entered the current national-park process later, as part of a new consultation exercise rather than an old manifesto track.But that is not a weakness. It is precisely why this can become a turning point. Because Malta now has three rare opportunities to think at a different scale. Not simply to add another square here or a landscaped patch there, but to create large public landscapes that materially change the rhythm of life in this country.That is the leap in quality people are asking for.How can large-scale parks change our daily lives?Where urban greening has happened well, even on a modest scale, the effect is immediate. People linger. Families gather. Children move more freely, and older people find comfort. Good public space calms a place down and restores dignity to ordinary life.Now imagine that principle applied to places of national scale.Manoel Island can become a public landscape in the heart of one of the most urbanized parts of Malta. White Rocks can become a vast coastal park where restoration, recreation, and open access are brought together intelligently. Fort Campbell can offer a large northern coastal environment where nature, heritage, and public enjoyment coexist without being suffocated by overdesign. These are tests of political maturity: are we capable of treating such places as national assets that strengthen wellbeing and ecological resilience all at once?People are ready for that conversation. In fact, they are ahead of the government on it.The public mood has shifted. Maltese and Gozitan families are no longer asking only for isolated embellishment. They are asking what kind of country we want to live in. They are asking whether progress can be felt in daily life and not only announced in speeches. They are asking whether open space will finally be planned with the same seriousness once reserved for roads, permits and construction.That is why these three parks matter so much. They can set a new national standard. One of those positive changes that changes people’s lives as outlined in my article on the Malta we must build next.How can we harmonise nature with public life?A serious approach should be about combining nature protection, public access, and heritage reuse. The real task is to shape these places so that the natural environment is protected, heritage is respected, and people are genuinely welcomed into them.That means designing parks that are generous without becoming artificial. Accessible without being overbuilt. Beautiful without being manicured into sterility.How do we build parks that last?In a few words: native planting, strong shade, tree cover, durable paths, seating, quiet corners, family areas, and points of coastal access where appropriate. We need Mediterranean landscapes that feel true to this place rather than being imported from somewhere else. We need to allow softness, texture, and biodiversity to define the experience.This means planning for long-term stewardship from day one. Great parks are not only designed; they are governed well. Water use, maintenance standards, biodiversity management, reuse of existing structures, visitor flows and public safety all need to be built into the model from the start. These sites should become examples of joined-up planning, not monuments to ribbon-cutting.If we, as a country, are serious about the way we care for our open spaces and parks, we should have by now a draft: a framework that secures public protection.A plan that guarantees accessibility, guides sensitive reuse of existing buildings, embeds biodiversity stewardship, imposes clear management duties and prevents these places from slipping back into speculative logic.How can we legislate for balance into urban development and protect our open spaces?Malta needs more than attractive renders of parks and open spaces. It needs a legal and institutional framework worthy of the country we want to live in and pass on to future generations.The issue is larger than three sites alone. It is about the kind of country people experience every day. A more liveable Malta begins with a clear principle: that land use and development must strengthen the space people have to breathe, walk, gather and live well.That means two things. First, every project should be judged not only by what it builds, but by whether it leaves Malta more balanced and more liveable than before.We must work with developers so that they become partners in improving the wider environment in which people live, not simply builders within a site boundary.Second, landscapes and open spaces of national value should enjoy stronger long-term protection in law. Back in 2004, under a Nationalist government, Malta took an important step with Natura 2000.But designation alone is not enough. Malta now needs a National Park Protection Act.What urban legacy will we leave?We want to leave more than another election-cycle announcement or a sequence of glossy impressions before a vote.But a shift in mindset about urban life and three public landscapes that are worthy of the people who live here.If we get this right, Manoel Island, White Rocks, and Fort Campbell can do more than provide open space. They can widen public life. They can deepen our relationship with the place. They can show that Malta is capable of protecting what is precious while giving it back to the people.That would be progress people can actually feel.Lovin Malta is open to interesting, compelling guest posts from third parties. These opinion pieces do not necessarily reflect the views of the company. Submit your piece at hello@lovinmalta.com•