Notes For Our City

Valentine's Day Mailboxes: Notes For Our City

From February 12-16, nuSarnia installed three Valentine’s Day inspired mailboxes across Sarnia, inviting residents to write handwritten notes to their neighbours, local businesses, and community spaces.

The goal was simple: create a low-barrier opportunity for people to express appreciation and strengthen everyday connection in their neighbourhoods. What began as a small placemaking activation became a tangible example of connection in action. 

Project Reach

Mailboxes Installed

3

Locations

Murphy Beach
Midtown Trail/Howard Watson
Mitton Village

Notes Collected

30

Neighbourhoods Activated

3

Mitton Village
Murphy Beach
Midtown Trail/Howard Watson Bisect

Connection As Our Core Metric

At nuSarnia, connection is not a “nice-to-have.” It is foundational infrastructure for human well-being. When we talk about connection, we mean the everyday conditions that allow people to: 

  • Meet and interact in daily life 
  • Feel welcome and comfortable in shared spaces 
  • Move safely and independently through their neighbourhoods 
  • Feel heard and able to participate  
  • Take pride in places that reflect shared identity

The Valentine’s Day mailboxes supported this outcome in several ways. 

How This Project Built Connection

Encouraged Neighbourhood-to-Neighbourhood Interaction

Thirty residents took the time to write a note to someone in their community. Each note represented:

  • Recognition
  • Gratitude
  • Encouragement
  • A reminder that someone is seen

These small acknowledgements strengthen trust and belonging, the foundation of safer, healthier communities.

Activated Public Space in a Gentle, Inviting Way

The mailboxes acted as temporary landmarks. 
People stopped.
They read the signage.
They asked questions. 
They smiled. 
The most common feedback we heard was “what a lovely idea.”

That response matters. It signals that residents are eager for small, joyful interventions that make their city feel warmer and more human.

Reinforced Civic Pride

By inviting residents to express care in neighbourhoods and local businesses, the project strengthened attachment to place. When people feel connected to one another, they are more likely to feel connected to where they live, leading to greater stewardship, civic pride, and long-term community resilience. 

Why This Matters

Strong social connection is linked to:

  • Lower rates of loneliness, anxiety, and depression
  • Higher life satisfaction
  • Greater trust between neighbours
  • Increased participation in community initiatives

Connection also reduces inequality by creating opportunities for people across generations and backgrounds to participate in shared experiences. The Valentine’s Day mailboxes created this kind of low-barrier participation. No registration. No cost. No formal program. Just a simple invitation to care. 

What We Learned

  • All three neighbourhoods participated, with Mitton Village and the Midtown Trail seeing the highest engagement.
  • Residents responded positively to simple, joyful public interactions. 
  • There is an appetite to expand this concept to additional neighbourhoods.

This Valentine’s Day mailboxes demonstrated that connection does not require large infrastructure investment. Sometimes, it begins with a handwritten note. As nuSarnia continues to prioritize connection as our most important measure of success, projects like this remind us that connection should be easy, not accidental and even small initiatives can create meaningful ripple effects across a city. 

Spring Clean-Up: Volunteers Wanted!

Join us on April 25 from 9:00AM – 12:00PM for our annual Spring Clean-Up along the Midtown Trail!